The Circle, October 29, 1981.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 26 No. 6 - October 29, 1981
content
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_ Par~ Plac~
getS;
long-awaitec,lfiOt water
·
-~
.
.:,.,
~·.
.
'.'.
':,_
'
by Bill Travers ;
.
.
owner
oi
Park Plac~.
uj
was n~t notified
w~ ·. would- c~~~ert tci
g~s)~
Pavelc~ said.
.
about the problem until a week after," said · ''The ·electric water heaters are the mosf txs ·
A new .gas heater ~as installed in the
Regini. "I sent niy.electrician ouno check
pensive.to
·
use and the least efficient.·Gas .
.
_.,,
',
.
.
'
.
.
of
by
Regi~i. Gas shipments·
will
be
paid
for by Marisi; as is done with electric bills
of the other heaters. ·
;, Park Place·dormitories on· Oct. 23, ending -·the situation. He reported back to me that
will be-cheaper, but most importantly ir
three weeks without hot water for ten ·• all fuses were. working, which meant that
will be more efficient for the students.,,
residents.
the hot water heater should have been
lnsiallatiqn of the new gas system started
. "It's about time," said
if
relieved Sue. worlcingalso."
:. on Oct. 23, 16 days after. the problem
Goldfeder; resident of Park Place. "It
.
..
. -;;
·
.
arose; "I was under the impression that the
. . "What upset me the most wa~ that, the
_ students were·kept in the.dark throughout
· the · whole period," said · Jeanne Le
Gloahec, resident of Park Place. "We had
should not have taken as long as it did for it
After more tha_n a week without . hot ; heater would be installed while the students
to be fixed. It's really inconvenient
to
have
water, a reas<;>n sttll had not been f?Und. · were on their mid-term break, Seeger said. ,
to walk through freezing temperatures and
More complaints to Seeger. forced h11?1 to.
"It
seemed like the most convenient time
rain, just to take a shower in someone · - contact Andy Pavelco, physical plant dJTec-: but instead Regini waited ,,
·
'
else's rooin."-
tor (maintenance).
u1
sent a Marist electri-
·
· .;; .
The proolem began on Oct, 7 w)len five ,cian to check out the situation," said· ·-. Currently the
n~room
building's water
rooms had no hot water. According to
Pavelco. "He-told me that the coils that
is heated by· three separate heaters. The
·, housing directqr Geoff Seeger, word did
heat the water were crudded and
full
of new gas heater is Japanese ·built, equipped
no.t reach hiin-until at least four days after -· lime. This would naturally cause the system
with an autmatic shut off system. "We are
the proble~ had surfaced. "I ·was .to · to be faulty. We knew ~ight then that in-
not concerned about saving money as much
understand the P,roblem to be for one stallation of a new water heater was
as.to provide our students with an efficient
room," Seeger said. "Not until several
necessary." .
.
.
.
system," said Pavelco. The other two
days after did I understand that it affected
On Oct. ·.
16,
Regini
and . Marist · heaters are electric, .one of which was ins
many others as well." .. ·
. ·
maintenance discussed the process of.cori-
stalled last year when a similar -situation
Seeger then called maintenance, which
verting. Th_t: decision _to convertto gas was - arose.. ·
..
.·
. _ .
relayed the message to Ivo Regini, the . agreed upon. "We decided right away that ·
The cost of installation will be taken care
no .idea when_ we would get-hot water or
even if the situation was being corrected.
There must be a lack of. communication
somewhere, because when we asked Geoff
(Seeger) or maintenance, we never got any
concrete answers."
: "With the tuition we pay here at Marist,
you would think that a problem like this
could be handled better," said LeGloahec.
"I don't like being kept in the dark."
. -~~rk Place is an off=campus housing
fac1l1ty rented by Marist. Marist has rented
Park Place by semesters for the past two
years.
It
is located five miles north of.cam-
pus on Route
90
in Hyde Park, and houses
38 students. -
THE
CIR.~LE
.
. . .
.
.
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.
. .
.
. .
.
WMCRtoget
A..P~
teletype
•
-,news. service
Marl~t College P_'?ughkeepsie,
N.
Y.
-
~f,;t:cf[
!t~,1!!~~~,i~~!}~~:~;·
will-.· have.· an , Assoc1atecl ·_. J>ress teletype :_
>,.·· · •
· ·
machine instaiied · in its,.newsrooin;
.
accor-. .
<·::
ding to the co.::news directors, Qi!lny Lu~
':
.
cianoandPaulMurnane., · • -:·--• ··
·
;The A.P, machine_res.embles -a .sm~B:
typewriter .. News; (!!atureaqd_ spor_ts st?r!eS
_ are·relayed from theAs~oc1ated Press of-.
:-:nee in New York City, through telephone
. ---- wires to the machine. The machine _then
print~ out- these. stories like. a !ypewri!er.
· "It's the·most basi~ piece of equipment ma
newsroom/' Luciano said ..
'>·
·.·
·.·· .. ·, · '
,
-
Volume
26,
Number
6 -
October
29, 1981
-.Th~ A;P. inachin~operates seven days a
week '24: hours a
:cfay;.
"H provides up-t0;-
the-Jriiriuie·, n~ws; desperat~ needed._ for
. professionaHsm • in news _reporliJ?g,'},· s~id
Luciano;
.
. .
.
:7
.
·.·
: .·.
>· -·,. ·
; ..
WMCR's
~ews staffJfrornJeft ,~·rightfBarry
Lewis,
Paiii ~~r~a~e·.
itrilGin·~y
Lu~ia-no~
<
-:-
; "The'addition of the machine represents
.
. . . .
_
.
_
a
360degree turn in the station's (lews·.and .
9:30
a.m.
and
6
p.m. Ne~swriters read the
$70musibep~id we~kly.
.
·'
"WMCR is big 'this' ye~r~. and C.S.L.
sports reporti11g,,, said Barry Le~is; s_p9rts' . Poughkeepsie Journal, pick out important
.
-
Luciano· said that' originally the station
probably fig_ured "'.~ coul<! use th~ ~Oney.:·
. director at
WMCR,."With the wire seTVJce, :news. stories· and re-write. them. With the
had · put in ··
a·:
request : for two new · Murnane said. Luciano aaded, It s a big
especially.
in _sports,
110
othe~/adio _stati?n A. P. machine~ the news at
WMCR will be·· typewriters when ·. they w_ere informed by
push for communi~ations."
.
· in the country will beat us, · ~ew1s said. - broadcast more _efficiently and frequently, . Dean Cox that C.S.L. might have enough
"We'll·· no' longer need.· to. depend on ·Lucianosaid~- .
.
_
>money to cover a wire-copy machine. Mur-
newspapers
~
everything is current·=-- this ,- The Council of Student Leaders has sign-'- . nane · · checked out- price quotes and
puts
WMCR on:the same level asany .net- . ed a two-year contract to cover the .costs of - presented them to Dean Cox a! the beginn- ·
work inthe.couritry,"Lewissaid,
·.
_.the·
A.P. machine Murnane said. In-
ing of'.the semester. Last Wedne.sday Dean
. WMCR
currently. broadcasts_ news_ at stallation will cost
$250,
and rental fees of · Cox harid~d
W~CR
the signed contract. -
·· "WMCR
is attempting to become a com-
munity statio·n rather than just a campus
station," said Luciano. "The win~ ~ervice
will make this goal more possible."
3from
Maristto be
-featured on documentary
.,(
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.
.,
·--
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.
.:
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:
by
Marianne Beyer
--
. Two Marist students and a staff member
will be featured in
a
CBS News documen-
tary ·about teenagers living with "partial vi-
sion."
·
_
.
Sophomore Jay Stone· and freshman
Paul Sforza· will appear on
"30
MINUTES,". a weekly news magazine for
-teenagers. Special Services counselor Har-
. riet -Peavy is interviewed by CBS cor~
-
--.
..
respondent Betty Ann Bowser as part of a
ten:minute segment -called "See-Minus,"
due to air
1 :30
p.m. Saturday.
·
- - Sto~
and Sforza, partially sighted since
birth, explain• the problems of l}_aving po(?r
eyesight. They have visual impairments
that. cannot be corrected to the normal
· ·20120
leveL Caused by heredity, disease, or
accidents, partial vision is· a handicap
which affects reading skills, distance and
depth perceptio'i1; and mobility._Even sim-
What'~ happening on Hallow~en
......
New program for disabled
pie tasks like typing a paper or seeing the television cameras and producers that
blackboard are--· extremely difficult and followed him around New York City for a
sometimes impossible for the partially day. At a summer seminar _for the partially
sighted.
··
·
-. sighted in Syracuse, New. York; Sforza
describes what it's like to know he'll never
drive a car~ he can't pass the Motor Vehi-
cle eye exam necessary for a valid driver's
license .
There are hundreds of thousands of
teenagers in America afflicted with partial
. vision, and many optical aids are being
developed across
-
the country. Stone
demonstrates the use of one such aid, the
-Visual Tek electronic magnifier, for the
\
,
-page3
Marist graduate Len Travaglione, now a
rehabilitation counselor for the New York
State Commission for the Blind and Visual-
ly Handicapped, appears i_n the news piece
and defines the legal rights of partially
sighted students. These include i;:ligibility
for financial aid, access to optical aids, and
funds to hire readers for schoolwork pur:
poses.
Marist College served as the starting
point for the news story's research and tap-
,
-
.. -_ page 3
ing, with other locations including New
York <:ity, San Francisco, and Long
L _____
_;, __________ ..;__...;., ____
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Island.
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THE CIRCLE·
October 29 1981
.
-
All leitera must be
typed
triple
s~ace with a 60 apace margin
,
and
·
a~bmllted lo the
·
.
Circle
office
no later than
6
p.m
.
Monday
.
Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
.
right
10 edU
au
leUers. LeUers mus!
be signed
,
but
names may be withheld
upon re-
-
quest. Leu!rs
will
be publlshed depending upon avallablllty of space
. ·
.
.
/
Financial ~id fight
To the Editor:
.
·
what amounts to a 35 percent
Students at independent univer-
decrease in
.
the National Direct
sities cannot fight the trend of an-
.·
Student Loan program and a 42
·nual
tuition
increases-tight? .. percent cut in Pell grants. But the
.
.
·
Right. Can they combat
.
ever
full Senate has not yet voted on
·
worsening inflation? Not really
:
appropriation
figures
;
..
and
·
But students can fight to preserve therefore, if students act quickly
student financial aid programs· the news need not be grim. .
that make it possible for hundreds ·
Flood your senators with letters
•
of thousands to study at their tellirig them you oppose cuts that
.
·
chosen
.
university.
may make independent
.
univer
~
.·
·
If
President Reagan succeeds in shies havens (or the rich. Don't
his
·
campaign
promise
to wait until the cuts affect your own
drastically cut the federal budget, pocketbooks because then it will
many students can kiss their be too late
.
An education system
federally guaranteed loan of Pell based on the ability and desire of
grant, among other loans and students to learn rather than the
.
grants, goodbye
.
ability to pay is essential to a
.
"Given the large number of democracy.
loans issued in
1981
and the con-
So write to your senators and
current debt service,
it
is likely no representatives (but particularly
.
new loans could be issued in
.
to
.
senators because the Senate is
Spread the
-
Word
.
.
1982,"
_
said New York State RepubHcan-controlled) and make
Education Department Commis-
your opinions count. You repre.:
-
sioner Gordon Arnbach, speaking sent a)arge voting bloc that can-
r~ently before a group of higher not be ignored, unless, of course,
education representatives
:
"The you choose
·
to
-
ignore cuts that
effects for higher education will would threaten the caliber and ac-
.
be devastating, particularly for cessibility of higher education in
To ket?p up a good relationship in the col-
The Maristcollege
_
Radlo station, WMCR,
lege among the students, fac
.
ulty and
offers several outlets for both students and
student financial aid
,
" he said, in this country.
·
discussing Mr. Reagan's budget
Michael Caruso
organizations, as
·
well as the "outside
faculty to publicize events and voice opl-
world," the most important tool is a working
nions
,
as Well as to participate in the radio
cutting proposals.
.
Executive Director of
·
In
.
other
·
grim news, · a Senate
the Independent
system of communications within the col-
programming format. The Circle is open for
lege. Much goes on every day here that
all forms of campus communications, such
subcommittee has
.
appropriated
Student Coalition
should not be dismissed with
"I didn't know
as letters, guest editorials, classified
.
ads,
about it," in sight of the fact that there are
articles, calendars, photographs, and press
media such as the newspaper and the radio
releases.
Storage service,
stati?n to keep people_ in
_
formed.
In making use of these opportunities, in-
·
.
.
-
.
..
.
.
. It 1s bo~h a right ~nd a responsibility of
.
dividuals, as well as organizations
;
can
·
.
.
.
. .
·
·
·
..
.
e_veryone
_
m the Manst community to par-
.
reach the Marist community
.
and
·
offer
a
..
_
TotheEd1tor'.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
,
som<:.!fhatcentr_aU~located.
. .
.
.·
.
.
· .
:-
.
-
t1clpate
.
m and
·
respond
..
to the
-
dayst~day
.·
,._-:-,
·
.
.
.
·
·
.
..
_
.
\d
:
•
d·
.
th
· •
·
h
.
·
h·h
:
i
f
;
:
.
.
, ·
..
Ro~e Kno.(l_ Fa~m 1s offeIJng_
~
,
Bndget ~ew1s
_
1s
)
~l!r student
.·
,._
..
,
. ---
...
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_
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.,
•
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, ..
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•
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....
campus
w
e
.
me 1um
roug
W IC
nor
.
. ,
·
Storage
•
··
Serv1ce
·
for
the
·
Mar1st
..
representative at
·
Martst College
·
,;.,
.
··
··
·,
.
·
..
· .. ,-,_
·
·
e'4en\s
··
and happen\ngs
··
\lia.t
·
estab\ish
·
the
·,,
·
··
··
-
\\ ·
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.
..
...
i1'
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•
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·.
·
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·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· · ·
-
·
·
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can
e
.
ma
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;
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_.
.
·
·
e
-
,
_~
·
.
':t
Cohiini.mity.
·
,There
_.
is
a,
short.-
BoxC405;
Campus
exL
1
f7
_ '
:'
,
\
"•:'.""'""'~
-
·~
~
·
"
"''
severai\vays toencourage p~rti6ipation
··
and
.
•
:
,
_
r-impu~dme
"
t° .
.
r\~es on ~or:nm
_
t"'
Y,{e_ac-
·
·
.
·
)
·
term
-
service
··
for Christmas,
.
for
·
·
Our 'phone
384~6626.
·
·
Please
response
or
.
to voice d
i
ssatisfaction
'
·
.
1
\
a,n
par \f'ga ;tn, ~n
.
thn
_
urn
·
1 c~n
_
·
six
·
weeks, and also for the sum-
call evenings
.
through t'hese media that exist on campus
.
.
wf or dor uds aft
'
.Y
eeping
.
efcambpllus •~:
.
.
.
mer,vacation, for t~ree months.
,
Louis Indeli_<;ato
.·
t
·
b t·
C?rme cin
°
enng
.
a means
O
pu
.
cop,
·
Pick up and delivery would be
con n u ions.
1:11on.
·
·
The 'perfect'
.
pap¢1"
.
.
Volunteers needed
.
.
Everyone has a complaint forThe Circle
.
_
We never
-
claimed to
be
the pelfect college
·
newspaper although
_
some people seem to
expect absolute perfection from
-
a staff that
is stil) learning.
·
.
·
··
. ·
·
.
··
,
.
Students constant1y_
·:
complain
--
,
tha.
_
t we
..
take issues
too
lightly, yerone of ourtargest
·
problems is tile lack of interested writers at
Marlst. College
.
If you think we
~
take our
issues too light!y, then how abouLjoining
the staff? Every student has the opportunity
to write forThe
.
.
Clrc.le,
.
~
.
. .
.
,~
.
:
,
.
,
··
Administrators complain we get the facts
mixed up and that our stories are one-sided.
..
Yet when we try to get an interview, we're
never.taken seriously.
·
.,
There are many other complaints cir-
..
culating around campus about the quality of
The Circle
.
However,
the Editors of The
_
Cir
-
·
cle can count the number of complaints that
.
· have
.
been addressed to us on our fingers.
·•
We certainty hope
·
y~u're
-
·impressing
·
so-
meone
by
laughing at
a
mistake in the Cir-
·
cle, be~ause judging from reactions to o~r
mistakes, they certainly don't bother many
people.
·
,
··
Perhaps with the
.
facilities Mari st offers
The Circle we should feel obliged .to put out
Co-Editors
a perfect paper every week. How man
·
y peo-
.
pie reading the Circle have ever
.
visited The
.·
·
yq the
Editor
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
Circle Office? It's in Room
168
in
the
Cam-
· ·
.
Sevefariocal schools and agen-
·
· pus
'
Center. Come
·
on down and visit us
'
cies are looking for college stu-
·
.
some
>
ume
>
·
Just excuse the walls that
dent volunteers to work as tutors
haven't been_ pai!'lt~d
.
fofrrtWlY, many y~~rs
;
•
and/or aidesi_11 their prograi:n on
Also
.
plEfa.se
·
excuse
·
the assorted discarded
..
'
•·
·
a
'
weekly
·
basis
;
approxih]at
_
ely
•
2
furniture that
.
has ended_up in The Circle of-
.
to 4 hours
,
.
,
·
;
.
_
Students who are seriously con-
sidering a
·
career in teaching or
child · -care services are most
desirable. lfyou would like to be
a volunteer, please contact me in
-
-
·
Room
266,
Campus Cent
.
er;
_
,:"
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Elizabeth Nolan
.
·
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Alcohofawareness .
.
,
.
.,
fice
:
We don'.t mind though; lt's
:
the two
'.
(and
only)
'.
broken
:
typewriters that cause
'~
us
·
pro
~
blems when we're trying to write a story
.
.
··
.
··
·
.
It seems that we g~t
.
the tm
.i
ntQf the corn-
.
plaints, yet we're expected to put up with a
lack of student interest, administrative
·
cooperation and good facilities.
.·
·
·
•
To the Editor:
:
..
,
.
.
We have organizelan Alco'hol
·
Don't worry, though, we're learn!ng to
There is a fqrce on campus con-
Awareness
-
,
Week slated
•.
for
cope and we're going to hang in there. Give
,
cerned
.
about
:
the abu
.
se
:
of. November
2-6.
We are having
us a hand Instead of. your criticism. Com-
·
alcohol. Its
·
members include
speakers, panels, films, exhibits
plain all you want
,
but on_ly you, Marist Col
-
.
·
.
students
.
.
from
·.
Freshmen
to
in the Galary, and Pub Night with
,
·
.
lege, can make The Circle b~tter •
. ::,
.
.
.. ·
·
Seniors, faculty members, and
.
WMCR.
.
.
·
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•
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<
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What would happen ifT~e Circle did11't
;
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·
_
staffmeinbers.
:
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.
.
.
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> .
,
come out one week because we didn't have
·.
Our
.
purpose
i
s
·.
to inform·
·
·
u
you don't do anything ~lse
enough stories, or no ~ne would give us very
·.
students about the possible
·
pro-
.
.
that week try to attend at least one
good information, or
.
worse
;
>
because we
blems
~
relatecr
:
to
·
alcohol.
-
-
We
·
of the events
;
You never
·
know
;
it
·
didn't warit to bring o
·
ur
.
own typewriters
.
don't
want
to
preach
nor do we
could be fun!
down to the office
;
·
Few people appreciate
·
want everyone
to
stop drinking.
The Circle, but what
'
s a Thursday afternoon
We want to curb some of the pro
0
-
without The
Circle
to laug
_
h at?
,
· _
blems associated with the abuse
of alcohol.
News Staff
. J\nne Keating
.
.
Chairman, Task Force
,
-
on Alcohol Abuse
Denise
Film,
Patrick
.
Lowell,
·
Karyn Magda!en, John Kraus,
·
'
Joanne Holdorf, Pat Brady
Jackie COnti, Barbara LaDuke
Business Manager
Maggie Browne
Jane Hanley
Terri Sullivan
Barry Lewis
"'arttetlng/Advertlslng
•
Jeanie O'Rourke
Joann Buie
The
Circle
Associate Editor
-;-,.
Feature Edlt~r
Staff
Rick O'Donnell
Theresa Sullivan
Donna COdy, Christine Dempsey,
Pet~r Fredsall, Karen Johnson,
Joanna Rosato, Patti Walsh
Sports Editor
Staff
.
.
Copy Editors
·
Nancy Brennan, Tim Dearle,
Tim Breuer, Pat Cullough,
·
Karen Flood, Denise Film,
John Petacchl, Ken Bohan,
Bill Travers, Dennis Martin
Thomas Shannon
Business Manager
.
Maggie Browne
.
·
Dlstrtbutlon Manager
Terri Tobin
Photography
Maggie Browne, Grace Gallagher
Cartoonists
Michael Moore
·
Eddie Powers
Social Editor
Allison McCarthy
Janel McNamara
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw
·,
·
-
·...:··
,·
·
I · ,
-
-
•
·
-
:
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·
.
.
-
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•
·
7
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-.
:
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.,
...
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·octobet29
19B1-THECIRCLE~Page3--
.
.
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.
.
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Disabl~ studerits·wil~
.
~
-
~i,1~
·
to earri
.
on~
..::
towaritheir' future employment':"
·
.'
·
.-
.
:
·
'
·:
:
.
·.
"The community was
.
starving for this,•~
:,•: ·
' ::
:./·
....
·.
· --
:
:··
'!
·. ·
:>/
:
· ·
,
.
.
.
:'.(
,
:
,>
·
::
credit.if they:enroll for
a
~einester ofswim~
:
.
:
.
.
Interested students
.-should
contact
·
the
·
.
said Pirerra.
-
.
.
_
.
.
:
:c··:
Manst
·
College
w_ill
,
SQ!)n~:
~e: starting
a
.:
~ing
t~is
~pring
at
the McCann ce·nter:
•
•
',
:_
•Special·
·
Services
-
·
-·
office in
·,
Champagnai·
·
·
·
AsJor the students, she. said the program ·
· ·
P[Ograrn that offers h¢li>•ii
·
ndJccreation to
_;:::,::
According
:
to Special
'.
Services
:
.
Director
Room 105.
·
.
0
·
.
:
will "supplement· the educationar
:·
ex-
·
·
: ·
dis~bled pe!sons, as
-
\vell as
~·
voluritetr
.
ex-
·
: .
Diarie
·
Pirerra, an aide
-
training program
•
·
·
perience it gives to
.
the disabled, and pro-
_
pen~ncc; to interested st'1'dents~
.
:
.
·
:
.
. ·
.
.
.
wiU be held at Mccann on Nov. 7 and 8.·
Pirerra said thafa Red Cross
·
represen-
vide something that is both educational and
Hs called. the
:"
Adaptive Aquatics pro~
:
During those two
,
days, students
-
who
tative, Dav,d Burick,
-
approached Marist recreational."
~gram,
and
·
it w11l
·
:t,ecome
,
a
·
:
one
·
credit
-,
vohmtcer
will
be taught the skills needed to
with the idea
of
finding a place that could
Pirerra added that Special Services and
special topics course
for
.
spring semester. In
:
-
work
.
with
-
persons afflicted with various
offer pool-time to the Poughkeepsie com-
Red Cross representatives, who will be pro-
the progra~, Marist students will be taught·
·
physical disabilities.
.
·
·
.
munity, which offers little recreation to its viding the aid training instruction, would
to
.coa~h disabled in<lividuals
:
who will be
.
.
·
~
-
Pirerra urged students
.
to get involved,
.-
large disabled population. The program probably be able to arrange an alternate
sw1mmmg for recreational and therapeutic
saying
-
"it's
·
an excellent learning ex-
wiU be open to Poughkeepsie residents as date for students unable
10
free themselves
reasons.
.
..
.
, .
.
perience for- them -
and it can be .used well as students.
.
on Nov. 7 and 8. •
i
Anders~n stciges original
..
•,
.
On November 12-15 an original musical
.
is a play "about fragmentation,-both on a
will..be
.
·
presented
-
in the Marist
·
theatre.
societal level
.
and an interpersonal level,"
"Graffiti," written by
·
Dave Heckendorn, ·said Don.aid Anderson, director of the
play.
.
.
Halloween
.
haunts
,~
·
Anderson, who is presently an adjunct
professor
·
of English, joined the Marist
·
staff in 1970. His early involvement with
·
the theatre followed· the traditional path;
For those
of
us who will not be in the
high school, college, and community
right state of mind to change our
theatre as an actor. In 1974 he helped form
costumes
•
and go out after the house
-
·
.
"Troupe,'.'
·
a theatre group, with BillDavis
.
parties and mixers this weekend; don't
and Tanya Dumont.
-
·
fret; Poughkeepsie's night spots will be-
·
ProductiOns
·
previously directed
v,
:
"witch" us all!
. ·
.
_
Anderson were the "Bald Soprano" in the
.
-.
First on the agenda, on Thursday, for
Spring of 1979 and "A Midsummer's Night
those who like to stretch the
-
weekend,
,
Dream" in the fall of that year.
.
.
.
The Chance
.
is having a
-
free party
.
.
The
"About that same time I started writing
best of Bruce Springsteen, South Side
plays of my own. Right now I have about a
.
,
Johnny, The Blues
,
Brothers and,giany
half dozen one
:
acts and I just finished my
more
will
be
-
hearg from
.,
"Onyx."
-
secpnd full length," said Anderson. Three
·
·
Prizes for the best costumes including a
of
jhese
one acts
will
be performed in
·
$100 cash prize for 1st place. On Frid~y
Poughke.epsie over winter intercession in
night, it's '
.
'Blotto-ween" with "Goofy
:
January.
_
•
Rock>' recording artist "Blotto'
·
' and
·
Anderson's attraction to the theatre lies
special guest "Mission." Prizes
will
be
in the factthat he both likes it and hates it;
'Graffite" cast members Mike Moore and Elisa Morris at rehearsal last Friday
.
photo by Terri Sullivan
I
.
'
.
given
·
again for the
.
best costumes. You
a factthat intrigues even himself. "I find
s •
·
•
T
l
·
t
k
>/j'J
·
willalsobeheardHveonWPDH-1-M.
.
that lam actracted toit sometimes
-
even
.
zngzng
.J.
e earams
Q
e
O
-~;
. .
At Noah's Ark a cosiume Halloween
.
against my
will.
There are times when I am
·
·
_
0
.
.
·
/:
1
party starts at IO. p.m; Prizes_ ·wm
_
be
.
~o fed up w~th 3:11 of it. yet
~ ~~d f!!Yself be-
·
.
While
.
they ~re not singing for their sup-
also plan t~ visit the children'~ ward of St.
'.;
·
!
awarded. A_t the Ntte <;aP
1
5.pec1al d
,
rmk
.
mg
_
d,~awn ~18-ht b_ac~ 1~to
It,
sa~d. Ander-
·
per anymore, they are still singing. Marist
.
Francis Hospital, dressed in costumes, to
·
i
1
ra!es, costume party with pnze_s and sur-
.
·
_
S?~•; I begm _to ~hsh_ke Jt because Jt JS S? ar-
College
.
Council on Theatrical Arts (MC-'
read b
_
edtime stories to the children.
.
.
. .
·
'
,
;
_}~~~\l~!C:tisoi
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is
~eport
_
i~~ :syrl)dsing -~~cces
,
s
~~t~
.
.
• '1:le~po~se
,
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is ..
im~~.?':ing
•
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w_~~'K\~. '-'
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c~hfli~~sar~~~
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li~c~si'~!~f{~t~fJtt~:!~{;~~Ji~~}}~~t?~1f!t;
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~$l~!~!tr~~iii'£~1\~t\tit'a%
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not ~ecessary. Kam1kaze
,;_
and,- M~l~!!..
..
musical.
.
. It wa$yc;ry E.1
.
ffi~~lt
,
because we
~
-
::
'
Singing
·
telegrams and bedt
,
ime stories
.
plays we do."
·
,
.
.
-
-·
i
'
I
.
·
.
_
<
~~11_
.
.
,
~!t~ts,
.
are
--:
f~~~ur,ecL at
~
a
,·
reduced
.
·
.
•
.
we!eJqokmgfo
_
r n~m-tr~d1t1ortal--types
·
-
,of
•
:
:
:
·
can be
~~~t
an)'.where on
.
campus, delivered
In this sen~e f'.'1ariststudents are reac~ing
h
J
·
:
_
.·
_.·.
~:
J'r!ce_~ps
cents.
·
··
.
.
·:
-
•
.
- .
,
.
0
; , ,
•.
,
.
:
\'
.
otc:s
-
a!id
;
t~mgs
_
ltke
.
that because.~~ re
.
·
.
by an appropnately d~essed •
.
•messenger,"
beyond the ~1m1ts of the campus and mto
,
t\~
-
--
.
·
.. ..,
.-
'.:
·,
··
Whatbett~r way to
_
end tltew~kend_
~
-
eal!n~/ ~!1s1cally. w1
.
th non-trad1t1onal
through this new proJect. These messages
thecommumty_.
.
.
.
t
r
~-:·
,
,
_
:
t!t~n t9,top
Jt
offon Sunday.
.
~1gh~ at
.
~usic;
:
said Anderson:
_
.
.
_
.
_·
.
can b~ bought for
_
$1.50 on W~dnesday
_
The expenence
·
with
·
.
the singing
n
.:_
·
,'
-
~_
l
'_•
.
-
_
:
·
_• •
'
Skinner
s'!
-
A COS!Um_e partY.
:
b~gms at 7
·
. .
·
·•
~h~fe
-
are however very
_
fe~. proble!1!~
_
nights
m
the caf~tena. Dawn-Mar~e Sturte-
_
telegrams has so far pro~ed to be successful
!I,
p.m. The first pnze ~s
-
$~51~5ash,and
Jae.mg :t~~-_casLaf!d
,
crew of Graffiti,
.
.
.
'-
.
vant;
:
·an executive member
.
,
ofMCCTA;
·
·
and personally rewarding, "The people
~
1
.
1
.
'
:
•
there are three $~0 prize~
:
111:c~~,
,
~s
:
~~11:
::
'!ll1c~
_
1s
,:
surpr1~1ng;~s
.
the. play
,
!_las
,
never
,
0
says t
_
hat t~~y •~lighten the spirit and add a
·
who have rec~ived them have been surpris-
.
l
it
l::·
as $10 and
$5 pr~zes'.
<
..
\"
=•
r
,:
· ;
.
'.
.
,
·
·
,
_
_
bee11s~aged befo_re. T~e b1g~~~t pro~le~
J
,
..
touch of fun~ they're a novelty."
.
.
ed
_
and receptive- no one has taken offense
.
. ·
_so remember
to stay mco~tume_and
:_
have Tl~ht
,
now IS keepmg everyoJle.~aPJ?Y
_
. .
Another means
in w
_
hich the MCCTA
is
.
to them," saysMs. Sturtevant..
.
.
'
'
\t
trick or treat at l:lll the localJ11ght-spot~.
and:the1r
_
eyes foc~sed on the
·
goal,
_
said
:
developing this project extends beyond the
.
So don't run away the next time you see
~t
_
{!
_
.
It's a gc,odway to party;UP ,a?d
t
~e~ain·
~:
~nder
1
sod,1~;yt~e.~lay seems to be crystalyz.,
.
;
campus
;
The East Park Home
{onhe
Aged
..
an·
.
oddly d~essed person _c<?ming do~n
.
!he
1:
!i'; •
anonymous at t~esame!101
_
e:
"::.>
:
·
-
.
.
·
;
mg~
.
.
1r.ect
it.
·/
·
,
is going
•
to be yisited by
,
members of the
·
. hall-you m1ghtbe
_
the rec1p1ent of a s1ngmg
· f
l
·
·
.
· ·
· ·
·-
· ' ·
·
·
·
·
·. ·
·
club every two \veeks and delivered happy
·
telegram or be~time story yourself.
!t."
_:,~
,
bjrthday mes~ages for the.residents:'.
_
They
·
_
.
.
·
.
·
t
r
·
.
,
Black
Sheep
P1~)fi-Jgg~e
\
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-
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,
..
·
-
.
,
_
.
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&i~f
it~=~~t
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E.~::;i;~:S~i:i~?.~~°itt~~
.
.
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;:~~i~:~:E~~;f
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.
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i•
·
-
· ·
·
d ·
· ·
J
··
·
w
I d"
·
N Y they are also working on an album m
·
Jamaicans to look to
A
.
frica when_.
·
a black • i
_
n
-
spreading th
_
is
music to
_
E
_
urope, Canada,
J
L
_
:'.-
-
. .,.
.
. -.
·
-
-
~[!gmate
_
m
:
.
ama1ca,
:,
_
~st
_
.
n 1es are
·
• • .
. .
.
!tV :'
r.,
_.·
,
-~- .
.
,
b~c;1)ntiilg
_
iilcr
_
easingty
·
·_
pop\llar ;,ln~ Black
-
Bearsv11Je st11d10 m \Voodst'?ck.
.
.
king would be crowned.
. .
.
:: :
Ainerica and Africa. Other great .Reggae
.
l
··'.
.
'
,;,
>>:t
:
;
:~
·
Sheep l>roJ.!ght
~hese
s~un~s t
_
o Manst
-
~ol~
-
·
-
Black .
.
Sheep got t<>geth~r;
,
1n Ph1!~delp~1a
~
-
-
The religion
·
is not
.
ail
·
organized one
.
artists include Peter Tosh, Dennis Brown
·
m
::
_:::"
S
_
:-~•-~
.:
;
lege lasfFriday
.
riight,
.
-
.·
:
·
,
·
. · .
.
: :
·: ,
_ •· ·
and allits _members are Yfe~t Indians with
Some Rastas. believe
_
S~lassie "."as a pr?p~et and Burtjing Spe
_
ar.
.
-
~
·
.
. 0:F
.-:
}
~
:
.c,'.::\
MiklM:iiler
,
organized the concert' which
•
·t
he_ exception
·
of one
_
A~encan
.
keybo~rd
_
.
.
a~ ~thers beh~ve he was
.
God or the remcar-
Freedom, peace and ~he exodus of . all
01
_
·
,.
,
.
>
.
:
was
:
s orisQred
.
b _
,
.
cua,
·::
Black- Student artJsL
_
Peter Graham and D~lrog Smith . nation ofJesus.
. . .
;
·,
.
.
.
.
. .
blackpe<;>ple
.
b_ack to ,:'-fnca
_are
~eoccurmg
tl:
=
·
;.
~ n : ~ n p _ w ~ &
:-_
TQl<J).l'l'
_
Jl'§,uC~as)~o~; s
_
p~fl
-_~?nte··pop~lar-reggae
,
hits
_
'
_bet.W.eerL
:
-
,
M~sLRastas
.
are
,
.vegetanans
-
who
.
.
also
..
the!":~s
_
1
_
!1
..
.!,h_1~
•
.
~llS
_
I~
~~1ch
IS
largely
~'
.
··
'
.
_
<
at large
·
as
Mike hopeµ
·
but those who at-
sets.·
. .
-:
··:•
·:
,..
.
·-
·
- ,
.,,.~:-
· ·
,
.
-,:-
r."
"
:"' -
,
a~stan~
•
f!-0m~al~ohol· and t~b~cco:: T-here
-poht1caL,
_
. _
-
-.
,
;
.
.
. . __
_
· .
.
-: --
-
.
_
-
:
.
~
,
..
,
,
-
tended thoroughly enjoyed themselves and
,
.·
. Reggae. music _developed m
.
t~~
late
_
six-
.
!"ost d1stmgmshmg charactensuc <;>f Rastas
-
!3lack
_
Sheep will be performm~
next
·
~n
, -
t,"
!
,:,
.
·
./
the ·concert soon
>
became a private party
.
ties and _1s dominate~
.
by ~l;ISICJans
,
who
IS the dread locks they
_w_ear
which form
Fnd~y, O~tober 30 at the Creative Music
~
.
:
,_
with everyone dancing and clapping to the
c
adhere to_the Rastafana_n rehg1on ..
·
.
natural_ly when curley hair 1s not combed.
_
Stud_10. Listen to WMCR for further
,
,
·
ieggae beat.
·
The first Rastafanans appeared in
Most of the members of Black Sheep are details.
0
l
,l
-
~
-
-
·
:
,
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.
~
---
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..
A View
Fro1n Abroad
Spanish, Spanish, Spanish
ventured beyond the hundred square acres
called, "Go fish" and "O!d Maid."
when they must have a desire to speak a
of Marist College to explore the old world.
Although we play these quite frequently,
killometer (think metric!) a minute. They
•
While reading the first two issues of the Madrid, Spain, is my home until June of the average day usually consists of a little are very friendly as well, even those who·
·
Circle, I was
.
stntck by the familiarity of 1982, and thus far, it's been a comfortable
bit more. Classes began the first week of have assigned 15 page term papers (in
by Veronica Shea
complaints about housing, cafeteria food, one>.
.
October after a month's orientation.
Spanish, of course) ..
apathy, etc. It was the first time in a month
·
1 live with a family called Moscoso, in a
Fortunately all the other students are
I suppose it's all
_
part of the challenge
and a half that I could understand an entire typical apartment building of a middle
American, although everybody's at a dif-
and maybe by the time the papers are due,
newspaper article!
·
class neighborhood. Each morning I am
ferent comprehension level. When. a pro-
Spanish will be second nature to me. Then
·
Perhaps this should be no small wonder greeted with a healthy "Buenos Dias"
fessor tells a joke, half' the class laughs
again I could be dreaming the impossible
for a junior communications major to re• from the Senor, Senora and my new sisters,
while the other half just shrugs and looks
dream
.
In any case, I'm learning and fin-
.
joice
_
over. Not, however, when the said ages 13, 8 and 7. The younger two have a
around the room.
ding that I can actually live in another
junior is surrounded by Spanish,.Spanish, particular liking for card games and we
Truthfully, the professors have been very
culture.
Spanish'
keep each other busy with "Pesca" and
patient with our lack of comprehension.
I
·also
have a single room, hot home•
·
Yes
j
was one of the brave souls who "Softerona" which once upon a time were
They speak very slowly anc!
.
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- - Page 4 •
THE
-
CIRCLE•
October
29, 1911
·
.
.
..
.
t
......
-
.
.
Students of independent coilcges
.
who
.
The focus ofthe ISC is primarii{in the
have been feeling the pressure of climbing
·
state legislative
.
,
system that affects
_
in~
educational costs will be glad tci learn that dependent educational aid. This organiza-
they have
·
friends both in Albany
·
and
·
tion was responsible for the increases in the
,
Washington
.
.
·
Tuition Assistance
.
Program (TAP)
These friends
-
are the members of the In-
·
awards
;
implcmented in
.
1978, and for the
dependent Student Coalition (ISC), a
,
placement of students
on
the Board of the
·
statewide nonprofit organization repr
'
esen-
Higher Education
. ·
Services
·
Corporation
ting the interests of more than 300,000 (HESC) which administers TAP. Students
students enrolled in Ne'?' York's indepen-
involved in the Coalition lobbied to
.
bring
dent colleges and universities. The ISC,
about a 16.2 million increase in TAP
form~d in 1977, cites the two major goals benefits, signed
'
into law by Governor
of the organization as the provision of Hugh Carey last July. This Jaw increases
educational opportunities
.
based on the individual awards, as well as family income
·
ability
to
learn, rather than the ability to eligibility aild the maximum family in-
pay, as well as providing students
·
the op~
.
come.
.
.
.
,
-
,
:
.
portunity to participate in the decision-
·
.
While this increase compl~tely cov~rs the
·
making process concerning education and
tui
t
ion increases in public education, it
the welfare of the school.
.
·
•
· ·
·
does not adequately cover the cost jump in
The ISC was formed to
,
articulate the
. _
the pi:ivate sector. This fact; in addition to
special needs of the student in the indepen-
drastic cuts in federal loans and grants, has
dent institution of higher education. Col-
increased the need for a state-oriented push
lege tuition increases annually at a rate of for increased financial aid. Federal monies
almost ten percent a year, averaging out to . now used for independent educatiofr are
a jump in cost of about $600 last year in now
·
threatened by plans to shift these
New York's private colleges and univer-
funds for public use.
·
·
sities
.
Without corresponding increases in
The ISC is also involved in lobbies to in-
federal and state aid
,
many students may crease federal as well as state aid
.
'
be unable to meet these annual increases
.-
Marist gets $50,000 grant to
st
_
udy
cor~
Marist
,
College was awarded a $50,000
National Endowment for the Humanities
(NEH)
·
Pilot Program grant to field-test a
series of new core course
s.
The grant
will
fund planning, study materials and evalua-
tion consultants.
.
liberal education,
..
_
which has been sup:
ported through the Title III and Quill
grants, according
,.
to facuity
,
member
·
Richard LaPietra
,
one of the grant
authors
.
'
·
·
All
c
ourses will prepare students to see
Along with Dr. LaPietra, the grant was
how modes of understanding or con-
authored by a committee
.
comprised of
:
sciou
s
ness
,
rather than particular subject
Xavier Ryan,
,
John Werenko; Phii Chase,
matter, are the essence of liberal education.
Bob Lewis and Rhys Williams
...
:.
"
" '.
.
.
Students will be shown how
.
the modes in
-
.
·
"The grant was the maximum amount
terplay
in
the study of particular subjects,
.
available
-
under the
.
NEH's Pilot Grant
thereby relating those subjects to each
Program and is a strong endorsement of
·
other.
.
•
. ·
.
t}:te strength of the proposal ,because of the
The awarding
·
of this grant
,
is a strong liinited
·
·
<
funds
.:-·
available," · said
_
'.
Judy
_
·
,
sign ofMarist's continuing
,
commitment to Sarnoff, director of rants;
'
'
.
:
.
.
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·
·
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.
·
·
Qua1itySandwieh
-
MeatS
·•
•
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At
Most
·
Reasonahle
.--
PriceB
-
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Salads •
·
soft
Drinks • Ice Cream
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Open
Nightly
·
7: 30
p.
-
m.
~
;
~
_
l
·.·
a~~-
See
us for your floor partie~
Special·Piatters Available
\
:
IESTAlJUMT B01JlS:
11 AM
'till lli:30 PM
.
.
.
.
Bt .
.
9 • Hyde
Park
:
.
229-7969
I
· Reme~bel'vour
;
$3.9Q
.
c9yer
chargeal:w-ays
i!'c:ludea
'
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for
·
Sul'Vivcll
THE
EIMCUREAN
'
Cl.UB
i
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accepting
:•
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.
~ers
~
·
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CaH
{Ext 139)
or
write
.
i
Fr. ~M~rte
by
:~
•.
.
F
ri~ay,
,
30th
:
Octobe
·
r.
·,
Space
:
·
is
.
limited
There
·
will be five sessions
held
·
on
-
·
-
~
Wednesdays
at
7:30
-
-
p.m.
.
.
/
}
.
'
Cristopher;
.
At least t~is year
.
we won't be«stranger~"
at Gregones _Halloween house party! Not
even the
·
ghosts of Marist could drive me
.
away; I love you!
•
.
•.
·
.
. •
·
Diana
Parley, Jeff &Jim;
·
,
. Your
·
_case of shaving cream has arrived ..
Please pick it up in the post office.
·
·
··
,
.·
..
S&D
(
.
.. RA's lead (or 8th consecutive week!!)
MMMnoeT;
.
You have your own special way of holding
qiy hand, Dont' ever let go.
·
·:
You have your own special way of turning
.
the world so it's facing the wayl'm going,
.
Don't ~ve
·
r leave me.
·
Eddie (Blue eyes)
This may not be Cortland, but lets pretend!
Making Magic
·
Dear Rob;
How about Sanctuary Tonight?
.
Adrienne. & Mikey,
Happy 1st.
J&D
Long live the cat house!
·
,
_
We love you Gary, Phil and Ahab.
Who likes sex?·
Smile
if
you do and we'll GET to you!!!!!!
Suzy D. (Betty
_
Buckley)
.
·
Hoping your star never' loses it gleam and
that you . always keep· the spirit of
"redrum"-and that you'll always "get your
fruit cup."
Leslie
To the cutest bunny rabbit in Gregory;
I'll
hang in there, because I can see the sun
on the horizon.
. Wave Watcher
Trixie, Nadine, Bunny & Sophie,
Go for the
M.T.!!!!!
Love, Claudette and Bubbles
Patty,
.
.
.
I hear your party was so good t,hat your
stomach jumped for joy!!!!
·
Cleanirig Crew
Tomy fellow''whacks";
.
.
There
'
s been a lot of blackouts on our floor
lately~ hasn't there? We need three shots to
burn theM.M.!
.
the third whack
R.O .
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - ' - - -
John
K.,
.
Karyn,
.
·
Was that you doing the bump to "Rosalita
No
·
hickeys yet, but the semester isn't over
.
last Friday night in Skinners?
yet.
Anonymous
.
·
Barb,
What color is it? Brown or Red.
Bonus Baby,
.
The difference between this Halloween and
last Halloween is that last Halloween night
you wore you~ pajamas.
·
Halliday
Bob Butterfield;
When's maintenan
_
ce installing the i-evolv-
.
ing door on your room?
.
DI;
The Question: Always?
The Answer: Yours
Greg
C.H.B.
Oscar:
I'll
see you up on the hill!· ·
Your roommate
0
;
.
Watch out for those CIA guys!
J.
Perchie:
.
We know you needed a ride home, but a
police car is getting a little ridiculous! You
convict!
themoonies
C.M.
You got away with it this weekend; but
you're there for last call next Friday!
·
Love, Seven
Amy (sex goddess
in Paris),
··
Mary,
We're really
·
missing the best horror show Let's have a family conference with
iny
.
To All The Marist Girls,
Excuse me, can you
·
tell me why you're so
good looking?
ToO.C.:
You wild woman! You'll get that nomina-
tion yet.
JimMuzz
_
_
Anonymous
Balding Girls,
.
Make your classes much? Heard they miss
you in the 8:30.
Amused
To the best member of MCCTA,
Thanks so much; Dawn. Keep up the good
work.
A
,
J.S.R.,
Do you think the cat will ever come back'?
Marvin Sims,
•
We'.re still waiting for our roses!
Donald&T
;
H.,
Happy Halloween: Are there pumpkins
and ghosts friendly like ours? Hope you
had lots of treats.
Your favorite roomies
Mary Vail:
If
you can get out of the pubs over there for
a minute, we wanted to say we all love and
miss you, and we
'
re taking good care of
Maria. Write soon.
Ali-Bear:
Come out and be wild like the old days-
your bar stool is waiting .
K2,D,CandJ
2
Re-Re:
Don't Jet the Indians get to you-you won!
M~
After hours party in the
white
Pacer this
weekend .
ToMac&Mc:
I'll
see you both in "Owego
.
., We'll turn
the town upside down.
/
·
Kate
don't be left in the dark! Come to the last
session of the lighting workshop tonight at
in the theatre. Sponsored by MCCTA
.
Any Student who has not signed over their
·
financial aid checks for Fall
1981
semester
,
please stop in the Business Office to do
so
immediately.
·
j
H·appy Halloween
from the Circle Staff
.
,
'
Witt;iout youru<kgirl:
.
·
.
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-
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RESTAURANT
.
CRANNEL
si:
POUGHKEEPSIE
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.
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on
Mon
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·
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®a&,~!
C.l-\P
•
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·
howe"e,;
a
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i£ls l>rial:
s,u;.1
invite
you
1
BU.DWEISER
join us fo
,MICHELOB
~
dinner
a.
drinks
110 <:ovE~
on
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OF
S:~E
Gt
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other
·
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SOMETIIING-
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fALL'(
8\G
MON-SAT fl:30·5
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IS
PLENTY OF SECURE,
WELL-LIT PARKlNG
o
o
•
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FAC\
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Tl ES MA'<
BE RESERVED
FOR
LUNCHEONS,
BANQUETS, PARTIES AND SPEC(AL OCCASIONSo
-
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- P a g e
6_:
THE CIRCLE_~ October
29,,
19B1
.·
,..
.
.,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-·
.
.
'
.···;·
' ' .
. .
.....
.
,·_..
.
,
_
·,.·
..
·
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
~·
.
-
~
_..,._
.
,
. .
· · ON.SALE NOW! .·
·•
·
· .·
.
SEE MARKETING CLUB REPRESENTATIVES
·
·
·
'FOR DETAILS· -
Dorm phptos l:o be ta"'~
Nov;;
2nd
&.
3rd . · · .. ··.··•··
.
·~-
.
.
.
.
· SENIORS:
· __
- • · ·
.
-
..
.
.
.
· .. · ·
·
·
.
-
·
.
.
-
.
····-'
.
.
~
.
.
.
:
.
·
...
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. . .
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..
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
, ... -···:)-/·?:_ .. ;-:-··.,:__, , ,
_
-Last day
for senior portr-its is-Oct~ber
29th!
·
- - . - - -
. -Help
us·:
iri
:dedicating
the
yearbOOk.
Send
your
.
/ -
_
sug"gestion_ :
to-
_
-
box
:
C843-
or· stop ·
by
-,•-
th,
~
:: -._ . _ -_
- ~eynard
o,ice~
·
,
-
.
.
Park
Di.~.~ou~~
Bev!r~ges
·
.
_·
'·
·.··. ALI
fkirist:& ···.-·· ........
.
.. ·
·-
- Albany
Post Road
-
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Hyd~Park .
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j .·•
Garden Center •· .
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·
Sp~c·_1als.Thi_sW~ek
·
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i . •·•
r
·
.. .
MOLSON
. $2.79 • 6 pack
'
.
192,
Washington
St: . _
I
·
.
·
. .•
PABST
·.
$6.49 ·
Case
.
.
Poughkeepsie, N.
Y. 12601
·
I
.
BLATZ ( cans)
.
$1.49 -
6 pack
.
914-471-5 700
:
· COKE
.
$1.09 - 2
liters -
t
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.
.
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10% Discount with Student ID
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- - - ~ - ~ - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - ~ ~ - - -..... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - October
29, 1981·
THE CIRCLE·
Page 7 - -
The
Inquiring
Photographer
· Dave Jaco, senior:
I really didn't know
about him. My brother does, though, so
I
guess
I
probably would.
I'll
wait up for
him this year and see.
·
Artie
Quintana, junior: I believe in the
Great Pumpkinbecaustfhe is an element
of
modern day fantasy.
Do you believe in the Great Pumpkin?
Justine McGrory, freshman: The great
pumpkin! Yeah, I'll be out there waiting
for him on Halloween night.
Donna Mazzola, junior: Of cotise,
I do. -
Who else is going to bring me goodies on
Halloween?-
Jane Rosenthal, sophomore: I do. When
I was little he made a house call.
NUNZIO'S ,PIZZA
~~;530
MAIN.'STR·EET
.
.
;· OPEN:
11:30 am~3:00 am
Weekdays
.
.
.
-·-
-
.
-
11:30-a.m.-4:.00a.m.
Weekends
Fast
11-elivery--
SPECIAL-OF-THE-MONTH
$3.75 Pies
.
'
471-0223
Marist Institu~e readies
4th
annual poll
For the fourth consecutive year, Marist
College students
will
be . conducting a
· survey of Dutchess County voters as they
emerge from the voting booths on Election
Day, Nov. 3. ·
.. The poll predicts the outcomes of major
races. Each year, the poll has accurately
predicted the results• in all of. the races
studied.
- Lee M. Miringoff, assistant professor of
Political Science and director of the Marist
Institute for Public Opinion, said: '"the
poll is being conducted to aid student
understanding of the political process."
A total of 160 students will be involved
in the Polling Project, and Miringoff said
.
.
J.
.
'
.
that voters in each of the County's 191 elec-
tion districts
will
be interviewed "at some
point during.the day. We're trying to find
out the reasons behind the choices voters
make and to understand the mood of the
electorate."
·
Results of the poll are not made public
before voting ends. • Miringoff and the
students will be commenting on the results
on
WKIP radio in Poughkeepsie, beginn-
ing at
9
p.m. election night.
Professors Jake Maness, Louis Zuc-
carello, Carolyn Landau and Gus Nolan
provided students from
classes as
volunteers.
-
.
I.
(SUPER NEW YORK CUTS)
Is NOW located
,
at-
A9
Academy Street
(Near
"Good
Times Cafe"
.
Ampl•
Customer
Parking
Hl1
and.Her
BODY PERM
SHAMPOO, CUT
AND BLOW DRY
.... $35.00
'
18'
0
OPEN ..
G SPECIAL
From
s500
Open
Dally
10-8·
No Appointment Nec•••ary
For
Appointment, call
_.5'-99M ·
·
Commuters: Save 20%
·
Check out meal
•ticket .plan-good in
:
·
Dining Hall Only
Commuters
&
Residents:
Save 10%
Gheck
out
coupon
booklet.· Good
in
Coffee Shop, Deli
and.Dining Hall
Purchase of booklets
may be made in
Food Service Off ice
_ _
Page_
_
B
~
-
THE
.
CIRCLE~ October29,
,
1981..-
_
_
. . . : . - - . - - . - ~ ~ ~ ~ - - : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ; ;
B-Guido ~s Corner
by Tony Cardon~.
·
Marvin
Sims, Joe
Ver-.
rim and Kevin Bal!cock
·
·
.
.
.
.
-Anthony "Moose"
-
·
T_imberlake has
been making news a lot lately. His latest
.
escapade was a
.
real winner; Moos
_
e h
_
ad a
brick thrown to his window at about 2 a.m.
·
.
by someone .
.
Moose's reply to the inc~de~•
·
was;
"Even when I sleep I make B-Gutdo
~
Corner."
.
"My roommates, Steve and Gil, know
·
why someone threw
.
the brick. I still don't
think it had something
le>
do with my out-
side shooting."
.
.
· _
.
·
-Newsflash:
Return of the Fox Day
1s
·
Nov. 2 at the home Volleyball game. Free
T-shirts to all who attend. Who is that
masked fox? Some say it's our number one
fans, Dick Quinn or
.
Jay Williams (S.I.D;)-
.
We seem to feel it's a top
_
school official
whose last name rhy~es with hurry.
Some suggestions for
Halloween costumes
-Betty Yeaglin as the FDA;s stamp of ap-
proval
·
·
.
.
.
-Barbara McMahon as Nadia Comenice
-Carla
Morrelo as Tatoo
-James
Humpf as Barney Rubble
.
-Mike Weise as Ronald Reagan
-Liz Healy, Eileen Dearie, and Linda
Gallagher, all as Dolly Parton
·
_
.
-Bob Kaminsky as Hong Kong Phoey
-Mark
Miller as the Michelin Mai:i
-Willie Clare ~s The Elepha~t Man
.·
-Elsie Anguilla as Matre D
.
. of Coppola~s
-Dickie
Keelan as Raymond Burr!! Hap-
py Halloween
Boos of the week
-Chris Tuite as Bo Derek
-BOO to George Ducey
.
for drinking
-TomLasalaasaT.V.repairman
other people's 'drinks and not buying his
-Th_e girls crew team as Nuns
own. Boo!
:
.
:
.
· ·· •.
·
·
·
•
.
.
-Gail Donoghue as Perry Mason
-Boo to Ivan Navas for letting the Sev's
-John Griffen as Johnny Carson
·
pizza man go up to the 7th floOJ:
and
tell t_he
·
·
-ZAP as Josie and the Pussy Cats
person his
.
pizza is down ~t
_
the secunty
·
-Star as
Star
.
desk. BOO!
.
<
.
.
•
·
·
.
.
.
.
-Nicolette
Filannino as Pat Benetar
.
·
~
The biggest. BOO
to
Farmer Vincent for
.
\VMC:R
Playlist
TOP ALBUM PICKS ~OR THE WEEK
1.
THE ROLLING STONES (Tattoo
You)- Start Me Up
.
·
·
.
2. GENESIS (Abacab)- No Reply At ~II
·
3. Hall~nsOATES (Private Eyes)- Private
Eyes
4. THE KINKS (Give The People What
IO
•.
DEBBIE H~RRY (KooKoo)-
Backfired
·
.
·
·
.
· ·
.
:
.
l l. SANTANA (ZeBop)- W1_nnmg
.
12. VAN HALEN. (Fair Warnmg)-- So this
is Love
·
·
·
Station Radiofile
They Want)- Destroyer
.
-
T" k t
Es
(L
D t Ce
.
•Stay
.
Tuned
_
For Numerous
ic e
5.
THE MOODY
.
BLU
ong 1s an
.
Voyager)-TheVoice
Giveaways
·
·
·
•
.
1
6. GO, GO's (Beauty And The Beat)- Our •Live broadcasts from the
.
Pub
·
(Bil
Lips Are Sealed
·
-
Palmeri, Doug Haight, Ed Powers)
•·
7. TOM PETTY
&
HEARTBREAKERS •Live Red Fox football vs. Pace w/Barry
(Hard Promises)-A Women in Love
·
Lewis & John Petachi
·
.
8. ALLMAN BROS. BAND (Brothers of •For dedications and requests call now at
the Road- Straight from the heart
.
ext.
132.
Your radio station ... where the
9. DEYO (New Traditionalis,ts)- Through Red Fox Rox!!!!!
·
Being Cool
·
-Rich Schatzel as Gum by
.
.
.
.
I
.
using preservafrves in his
:
meats. BOO
)
,'
. .
.
,
'
.
1f
~\\;ii~~;f
f
ttdon
.
B~:~.,
h~~-.:::;,o:,,,
&n.
i~i?
:,
,
111111111
.
I
., ,
:, .
11111111111
fr/
~~
~
-
. =:
1
.
-Lirid_aPanarnas
J~cq~es_Cousteau
·
.
·
akcihol;
.·
Miu:ist
_
·
wiil be
.
·
.
h
.
oldirig
:
alcoh~I
...
·
.
.
. ~
-
-
.
·
_
.
:·_·:_
As
E N
'
_
.
z
.
-
A
·.
-
, s
.
·
:
·
·
:
·
·
_·.
_
.
'
·
'
/
-John, KurtZ)~S
_
Uncle
.
Joe
_
of Pettycoat
.
awareness
.
meetings from
-
NOV
i
2
·
to
4
.
m
·,
.
.
}
·
Junction
·
:
.
··
.-
·
.
,
. ·
·
:
-
·
Fireside "Lounge.
·
Please attend;
.
the B-
-'
•
.
.
.
-Billy Gillespie as Barney Fife
.
.
·
.
Guido's staff. will be there.
·
.
,
·
•
~Torri
Shann<>n
..
as ;Arnold, the Flints
.
·
·
.
Seiler's
.
claim to quality meats is a result
.. _.
stone's paper:boy
.
..
:
...
;
. .
..
.
.
.
.
.
of
.
from
.
using Farmers.
,
Yincent's
..
famoµs
;
'
.
,.·
-Debbie Kessletr!ark
:
as
'.a
sttck
,:
choice cuts.
·
,:-
·
·
·
·
:
<
.
.
.
.
.
. ·
.
·. ·
.
..
.
.
dynamite (Boomt
_.::.
·
.
,,
.
···. ,.:
.
·
•
·
·
·
:.
Hockey (aris;
•
see Marist in
.
their
-
h
_
ome
-MikeDoher'ty
as O_r~on Wells
opener Moriday Nov. 2nd. B-Guido's will
-Ray Valdes as
.
a Bncklay~r
be there scouting the crowd for feature
.J:C.
Gorman.?s a Flash Cube.
.
stories.
:
.
.
-Cindy Hesk~th and Lynn
.
Canmng as
.
Happy
.
Birthday, Fran. Love,
·
Tony,
Laverne and Sh_1rley
.
.
Marvin, Guido
arid
Kevin.
·
.
.
·
-John Petaccqts Pugsly
.
One of-the most feared R.A
;
's on cam-
-John Bel~~in
_
?.
~s Devo
.
pus, Debbie Valentine, p_oses above
in
h~r
-Joe Verni!• a
f
11my Durante
stunning Rockette outfit at last year
s
-Joe
Grassi as
__
G.I. Joe
.
.
.
Halloween mixer!
..
-Kevin Babcock as Dudly Do-r:1ght
We hope all of you
.
attend
-
.
this Satu~·
-Soup C:llmp
,
b~II ~tay home
·
da"y's mixer'. Terri SuHivart ~nd
.
Mag~~e
..
-Pam
·
¥cGregor as Jesse James
. Browne
,,,m
be there,- appearmg a
_
s Lois
.
-Barry Ja111ison
_
iis
:
~eedt,emeyer
·
;
Lahe
•
and Jimmy Olson. They said;
'
.
'W~'H
,
-Sherly\
·
and
.
P~mse
:
a~
:
Lenny anq
.
bothlfo
-
looking for that"SUPER" n111~,"
Squiggy
··
-
,
.
>
.
;
l
.
.
·
..
. '
·
: · · .. ·.
·
·
··
· ·
·
·
·
·.
·
·
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.
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WashJngtdtl
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(·
-
:
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COFFEE:sA
;
NbW1cHES
'.<
.
•
-
•
7,,
,,,,
..
-
··
-
.
• ,
•
.
.
!
GROCERIES-BEER
'
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·
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GREAT
.
FQ
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·-
·
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.
·-
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:
.
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.
;
.
.
.
•
•
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of
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B.M,T.
.
·
BOLOGNA
.·
,H
,,,.,P,w,,,.
a
.
•
'xc.,.,
,
i3o:-,gs•
•
·
AIASKAN KING CRAB
SUBWAY S~CIAL
SHRIMP
,H.,,,c;.,...,.
.
a,h"J"O
•
TUNA
·.
SPICY ITAUAN
·
·
,
G,.,,.,
&
P,:,:,.:..,,.
,
·
ITAUAN
EXPRESS
ROAST BEEF
,s.,~
&
M ••
,1>ou,;
HAM
·,
.
.
:
SAUSAGE
nJRKEY BREAST
MEAlBALLS
PASTRAMI
·
CHEESE
PEPPERONI
VEGETARIAN
GENOA SAL\MI
SALAD Pl.ATE
'-rr
,
..d"WOY,.:,.,ht'lwit.,,•~"'~~•O--•l..ffnil::1>•DIP1c:.....,•T.-.IMf.._
C..-
_
P ~
•BIM•~•
.
Su•""""-.fO,
We've got more
taste.
PARK DISCOUNT PLAZA. HYDE PARK
(Next to Carvel
.
.
· .·
·
: ·
OPEN LATE
·
·,;:
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·:
·.
~--
-
.
·
. . . .
··
·
.
Op8J17
·
pay5
·
a
Week
6
a~rn: -
9
p.m.
452-4772
I
I
!
11
'·
W:[ugShots
·
.
·
~
·
. . . .
~)
.
,.
·:..-
.
·
..
,·
•·
,-
.
-
.
.. i
....
.
..
...
•
···
.'
.
_
.
.-
_
.
.
.
...
--
-
- -
-
--
'--,·
. ,
·
.:
...:.
Aboveis.the-B-Guido·staff's-"Happy
.
.
.
.
.
:
.·
.
Halloween'
':.
,
picture~
·
featuring, fr:om
. ·
.
:
.
·
1eft to right Kevin Babcock, Joe Verrilli,
·
·
.
Tony Cardone, and Marvin Sims. When
· .
.
: askedJf the}ihelieved in the Great
Pum-
-
·
pkin, they replied "Don't talk about our
.
:
leader Bil Remick that way!•~
.
.
,
:
•
•
-
.
.
A
strange phenomenon (above right)
..
_
.
was seen descending the stairs of House
IV
in Champagnat last Saturday· night
at 4 a.m. Nodues have been found, but
some report that it ·was seen in the·
.
.
Renaissance sitting on a bar stool that
·
·
same night. Could
.
it be the notorious
"Champagnat ghost?"
.
At right are students casting their
ballots for the Top
-
Ten Bodies on cam-
pus,
sp°iored
by
the B-Gu!do staff.
Photographs
by
Terri Sullivan
·
and Maggie Browne .
,
·:
,
~
-
.
..
....
·
-
...
-
·
·
·
..
~·-
-
----
---
__
,.
__
_
______..
...
....
_
.,._
,..
__
.
.
.
..
-
.
...
:
- - Page
10
~
THE CIRCLE·
_
October 29, 1N1
_
_ ,;_.;__~--~~-.;....
.... _~:::::::_::::::::::::~:;:::,:::~::::::::;~~
-
,
.
-
-
·
_
.
.
..
.
~
_;
.
:
.
·
.
.
:
.
:
.
~
.
:
.
.,;..
~
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
..,,.,
..
.
.
·
•
·
.
Circle Revh~\\
·
s
.
.
'
•
J
:i
~
:
:·'.
.
:
.-
·
.
:
.
,
;
:
'
:
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?_,'.
:
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.
:
~
-
Seiler~s
g(JeS
Aim.enian
>
.
;.
::
:·
. .
.
:
.
.
·
~~t
w~ic
:
'.
~~
:
;ad
th~
:
~l~~~;;
.
~{di~~.
-
;
.,
•
::
:·.
:
\.
~.-
: ~-
on Armcmian
food,
·
served in the
-
elegant-'
<:
:
::
:·
·
_
·
ambience of the Marist Cafeteria. This din.:
:
:
~
·. ·
,
-:
...
ing spot is
.
one
.
not to be missed,
·
and cer.;.
..
.
.
..
.
.
_
tainly not to be forgotten.
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
,
.
,
·
•
.
We
..
were seated only
-·
twenty minutes
after arrival, due to the facuhat thi~ dining
.
.
spot requires
.
l.D. numbers to be
-
allowed
. ·
.
entrance. We had to serve ourselves,
··
and
after finding a tray and a clean plate, we
moved on to the feast.
Salad was available, as well as rolls and a
few vegetable choices to accompany the
meal. This Armenian meal consisted of
lamb, beef, and seafood choices served
shishkebob style. After figuring out what
these little objects on sticks were, we served
ourselves.
.
·.
The
·
beverage choice was wide;
:
and
deserving of the meal. As no
·.
Armenian
drinks were available, we chose between a
range of brands at the soda machine, as
.
well as a selection of fruit juices to comple-
·
·
ment the meal.
·
·
For some reason, no one seemed to have
much appetite for dessert. We brought our
trays to a small window where unidentified
hands reached out and grabbed them. One
fellow diner was scolded for leaving silver-
ware on the
:
iray. You just can't take some
.
·
people anywhere.
·
·
w~-·-·
NDV.
·
19-tB
:
-
,
.
·
·
·-
--
-·
-
....
·
, ·
1
:
...
•
_
..
ri~t':whenthe•
>
>·
'.·
Jlil~l
.
-
America1i
·
Caricer
. -
-
-
•:
.
.
..
I
;~k!t;~~~&t
.
::t!\~ll!II
-
to give
up
cigarettes
.-
.
·
=:~
~\!ll~ltll~~
for
a
day. Give it
·a
. · ·
•••• -:-:•=:•·==·=·=·=·
try
~
·
ht f d
'
-
}:;:; J;:t:;l;:;:;
.
ou m1~t
f
1n
,,
.
·=========
:l=~=~===:::::
you
can qui orever.
:t'
II
.
THE GREAT AME~ICAN"
.::::?\:.
=::::::::::::):::]
.
SMOKEOUT
.
.
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This
space
·
contri~uted
by
the
publisher.
_
is fluorescent, the voices are loud, and
_if
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ . . . ; - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - ~ - - - - ~ - " ' . " " " - - - - ~ - ,
you're really lucky; you'll get to see so
0
meone slip on a salad leaf or drop a tray.
This
entertainment is always applauded by
the restaurant patrons.
_
·.
-
·
All in all, it was a memorable
.
dinner,
although some felt that theArmenian food
should have stayed in Armenia. Many of
our
·
fellow patrons decided
·
ro skip the
_
meal, and chose
to
visit McDonald's They
just
don't know what they missed.
.
.
·
.
Noah's
Ark
.
A number of times we have .ventured
to
.
:
Noan;s Ark for a few drinks'and some off-
ca~P~
.
s
·.
socia\izi11g .
.
·
l-l9wever,
.·
Howevef,
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·li~js~
1ij~;1~
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~ili~llt~~ll~~l~:t~~~l;~~~;;t
f
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-
.
.
For those of you who have never been to
.
Noah's Ark it's loca
_
ted on Delafield; right.
around the corner
.
fromProvenzano's, The
atmosphere is
:
friendly
~
and that combined
:
with an antique
·i
decor
tha(
produces
:
a
.
warm
comfortable
.
Jeeling
.
one
.
usually
.
doesn'fgefat a bar,
'._
:
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Down
:
tQ
.
tti
·
e
':
juicy'
'
stuff!
:
The food is
_
outstancting;
·,
W~
~
started off our dinner:
.
with Fren'ch
Onion
~oup, which
t~.
by
.far
..
_
.
.
the best _!E
.
eoughkeep:Sie
.'
}Yj!
_
then pz:oceed-
· ·
'.
ed
tocpnquer-a'llfotiiftafo of greens topped
.
l
~
:
,
_
.
.
_..
. . ·
wiih
a
creamy lake of blue cheese dressing
.
.
.
Delight~d
,
with the
·
meal so far, we waited
·
.
::'>··
L
.
·
:"
·,
·
·.•
.
·
-
:
.
••
:·
•
·
with
.
ariti
.
cipa'tion
.
for
..
the
:
,
main
•.
course
:.
.
:
.-
'.
_
:
;
·
when the
,
food caiJie;
we
·
~~rt(not
:
disap,
•·
'
•
··
· .
pointed to say the least. I had a mushroom
·.
_
,
.
,
: /
quiche that
:,.V
_
as
s'o
_
ou~
·
o( this
,
world
/
and
.
·
·
•
·
,.
····
Sheryl's
·
plate was
·
overflowi:ng wiih the
:;
. . ..
•
.
.
most delicious ham
;
crepes s~e•s ever
_
tasted
:
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
The foodwas
·
hot and plentiful. Needless.to
·
·
say/we_ enjoyed the meal
·
tremendously.
-
These are only a few, of the en trees that-one
can choose't'rom
.
:·
.
.
-
.
·.
.
...
..
.
)·he atmosphere
:wa
.
s warm, the price~ are
·
'.,
.:.
:
.
very
'
inexpensive, and the food is
,
'terriuc:
·h
:
.
,
.
Noa~•s
.
isagreat place,
·
not only for dinner,
.
1p
.
.
but
·
they also have
·
a
.
terrific lunch
.
·
menti
:
..
L
.
-·
Noah's Ark
:
rates
·
a IOin our book
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Whe~ you are
-
in the mood
-
for a
g~o~
.
·
meatbut
Y<>U
don't have a fortune
.
to
spend
.
and
.
don't want a
·
hamburger, Joseph's;
-
located on Delafield Street iri Poughkeep~
sie, is the plac~ for you.
.
.
.
.
.
;
:
.
'.
:,.
.
,
,
. ·
'-~:
This
.
little,
.
quaint
-
:
Italian
:
·
·
restau
'
rant
-:
greets
.
you
'with
a
tray
.
'
of cheese
;
arici
~
·
·
crackers on the house followed by
.
a rrienu
consisting
·
or a variety of dl1hes
·
ranging
·
from full course
.
meals to incredibly inex-
·
pensive a la carte dishes, ranging from
'
Italian
-
prepared seafood and pasta dishes
served generously and promptly. The wine
choice is excellent, and makes a tasteful ac-
companiment to each m·eal. The selection
of desserts, if you have room for any, mat-
ches the delicious quality of the meal.
.
The atmosphere of Joseph's is quiet and
·
-
relaxing. It's an affordable escape from the
hustle and pressures of school. Joseph's is
a college
·
student's paradise, in price, at-
mosphere and food choice
.
·
-Susan Vassallo
. · .
·.
:
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GetontlteM~tlain
-
-
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.....,,.....,... _ _
.... ,... ....... _ .... _ October 29, 1981
·
·
T~ECIRCLE·
Page 1 1 - - -
.
··
SOcCer
squadboQ:§i~
'
:fegpra<Up to
.
·
10-4-2
·
·
·
,
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
beJeats{Stt
'
Jbh~
·
's a~d
Seton
Hall
by Paul Palmer
·
Fri~ay
·
night'.s game imder the
,
lights in
.
.
•
.
.
.
-
.
,
·
New Jersey against Seton Hall was a totally ·
. The Marist Colleg~ soccer tea~ notched -different story.
L~st year some sai~ •~al the
two more victories last week to up their
.
wm, 9-0 for Martst, ~as a combmt1on of
record to
·
10-4-2: The first victim was St. good playing and luck but after this year's
·
Johns University and the second victim was game I think the )uck can
.
be exclud~d -
Seton Hall.
·
.
Marist won this year 8-0. Marist only took
•
In
·
the St. Johns game the
·
two teams 13 shots in the game ":~ich was played
played to
a
scoreless first half before
Bil1
·
under sloppy, soggy cond1ttons.
Cooper got things ro11ing Marist's way
with an assist frnm brother Bob. And again
. ·
The scoring parade began once again
it was Marist, this time from transfer Ian
.
with
Bill
Cooper the assist to Yyvind
Arscott. Arscott's goal was unassisted and Larssen. Then.it was Jan Arscott on his se-
gave Marist all
-
the goals they needed as cond goal in
.
two gaines again this time
they.hung on for the 2-1 victory.
unassisted
.
Marist's third goal came on a
patented Oyvind Larssen penalty kick. ing this season, they are Oct. 28 vs. Pace at
Bobby Cooper supplied Marist with it's
'\
home at
3:00 p.m.; Oct. 31 at Adelphi at
fourth goal on an
·
assist from Ian Arscott
.
2
:
00 p.m.~ Nov. 4 vs. Union at home at
Number five was from
Bill
Cooper and the 2:30 p.m. and finally Nov. 7 at Manha1tan
sixth and final goal of the first hair went to at
I :00 p.m.
·
freshman Vinnie Caruso.
·
The second half saw Marist calm down a
· little and score only two goals, the first of
which went to Caruso
.
unassisted. Marist's
eighth · and final goal was scored by
sophomore PaulSutherland.
The win leaves Marist with a 4-2 record
in the Tri-State Soccer Conference and 10-
4-2 overall
.
The Red Foxes have
.
four games remain-
•...• corner Kicks---··
Goalie Andy Homola now has a 1.00
goals against average after 16 games.
Leading scorers are freshmen Tim
Buchanan and transfer Ian Arscott tied
with 11 pts apiece. Marist has outscored
their opponents by a 36-16 margin.
New York State Soccer Ratings
Team
Division
I
Record
1.1.1.U
.
11-0-2
1 0 )
2.Columbla
3. St
Francis
4.
Cornell
5.
Hartwick
6.
Colgate
·
7.
Marlst
8.
Fordham
·
9.
Syracuse
10
.
C,C.NX
NAfy1E
TP
Ian Arscott
11
Tim Buchanan
11
Bill
Cooper
.
10
Oyvind Larssen
10
Ed
Isaacson
10
John Goff
.
9
Bob Cooper
8
ToreUdahl
7
·
Vincent Caruso
5
7-0-1
9-2
5.3.1
1·2·3
6-3
8-4-2
5-3-1
6-6
6·1-2
Points
Results
100
d. CW Post
4-1,
d, Manhattanville
9-0
.
d, Penn
St.
3-1
90
d.
Yale
2-0
77
d. Fordham
2-1,
d, Adelphi
2-0
70
I.
Brown
1·2
63
d. Syracuse
1-0
34
I.
Army
0-2
33
d. Pratt
5-0, 1, St.
Peters
1-3
30
I.
St.
Francis
1-2, 1,
F.D
.
U.
(T) 2-3
25
I.
Hartwick
0
-
1
21
d. Hunter
3-0,
d
.
Kings
1-0,
d, CW Post
2-1
·
Goalkeeping
Games
Andrew Homola
16
Andy La Rocca
1
Heinz Warmhold
1
Totals
16
Opponents
16
Min.Played
1440
45
15
1500
1500
G.A.
16
0
0
16
36
.
.
~
;
~
z
~
·
~
·
+
·~~~~~~~~~~~i~
•
;;
i;
·
~
-
-
r
~-
'.
_
"
·
,
-
John Hintze
2
G.A
.
A,Saves
Pc\,
so
W:L-i
1.00
·--
90
. 849
-
.
4
.. ,
.. •
'
'\0-4-2.
•
Paul Sutherland
2
0.00
2
1.000
0
o:o.o
Mike Vardilli
1
Totals
.
93
Opponents
37
0.96
92
.851
4
10-4·2
2.16
115
.762
3
4-10-2
Tim
Buchanon moving the
ball and
Marlst
up in
the
soccer ratings.
.
_
.
. .
,
.
.
.
.
.
..
:
photo
by
Mike
Chung
·
Tennis Teartr
;
eilds season with
,
4~2
mark
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
,
_
-
-
~,
:~:
.
-
.
.
.
'-
~-.
.
:
.
./
.
-
.
.
_,Y Karen Flood
. The absence of key players Nancy Col-
New Rochelle's Nancy McAuliffe 6-0, 6-1.
satisfying" commented Coach Joe Weil
. .
.
.
..
"
'
'
agrossi and Kathy Carmody due to a crew
In first doubles, the tandem of Lisa Ar-
·
after the match.
·
Their tennis season came to
.
an end on race did present somewhat of a challenge
curi and Karen Fl~od (M) tripped Betsy
.,,
:
In singles Sue Miranda
(C)
defeated
Saturday, October 24th in New Rochelle for the Red Foxes, but the line up's new
Green and Denise Byrd (NR) 6-J, 6-2; and
Nancy Colagrossi (M) 6-4
,
6-0; Donna
.
just after Lisa Arcuri swatted an awesome
'
form met that
.
challenge and iced a 4-1 ver-
_
the team
of
Chris Carey and Jane Piecuch
·
Faron
(C)
edged Jeannette Mendy (M)
7
-
5.
·
unreturnable
·
cross-country backhand into diet over the College of New Rochelle .
.
·
.
·
...
'.
(M) were edged by Pory McCurie and Cin-
·
6-4; Kathy Mulligan (M) handled Beckr
.
_
thecorner
.
to
.
duallywinadouhlesmatch
Marist's Jeanette Mendy' covered the
·
-
dyCalone{NR)6-4,6-4.
·
Wilt
(C)
6-1, 6-3; Karen Flood (M) did
·
·
,
with partner Karen Flood
,
The Marist Col-
.
first singles position and defeated
.
Lisa
. : ·
/
away with Linda Acierno
(C)
6-1, 6
-
4;
J~~e Women•~ Tennis Team had recorded
.
Hayes
,
of:_
_
New Roch~lle
.
6-3, 7
7
_6
.
.
..
.
:
E~rlier in the week on Octob_er 21st, the
:
Kathy Carmondy (M) beat Debbie Parrot
1t s fourth wm of the
.
day to assure
·
the Sophomore
·
Karen
_
,.
Flood of
·
Manst
,
Manst women went to battle with Concor-
(C)
6-4, 6-0; and Lisa Arcuri disposed of
·
.
match against the College ofNew Rochelle, dominated New Rochelle's Ann Konefal 6~
·
.
dia on home territory, and fired up a 5-4
Concordia
'
s determined Debbie Malewitz
·
,
and end their season with an overall record
·
3, 6-3; and Marist'
.
s strong and promising
·
.
victory. "Concordia has a strong team with
7-6, 7-6
.
of4-2.
.
freshman, -Kathy Mulligan disposed of
a lot of depth therefore the win was really
In
doubles Sue Miranda and Linda
.
Acierno (C) defeated Nancy Colagrossi and
:
·
.
•
·
·
.
:
HooJ!$t
er~
·
prepar~Ji!r
-
inidal
•
l)ivisf on
·
.
f
c(lmpaign
·
:·
fl~~;:
1
:i~:~~~i:~~ii!1!5~~1~~ft~~;·
·
,.
·
·
·
.
..
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·-
-
· ·
.
-
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-
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,
:
-
:,
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.
.
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·
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.:
.
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'
:
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:
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:
·
·
ChrisCareyandJanePiecuchcapturedthe
:
·
.
Speclai,tp
_
the Circle
rugged rebounder, and
·
team leader who
also a great scorer. Veterans Rufus Cooper
win for Marist by defeating Debbie Parrot
\
-
should
.
better his marks of 7.5 points and
and Tom Meekins will fight for the point
and Debbie Malewitz of Concordia, 8-5
.
\<
., .
Marist College -basketball
·
coach Ron
·
5.6 rebounds per game
,
that he compiled
guard position, as will talented freshman
Marist's only team losses this year came
+
.
Petro welcomed back seven lettermen and last year while playing despite a painful
Bruce Johnson.
.
at
_
the
-
hands of Siena College and Pace
'
/
-
six top newcomers as basketball practice
..
knee injury. Smith, a 6'5" sharpshooter, is
·
_
The Red Foxes are deep at forward, pac·
University. Siena defeated Marist 5-2, and
'
commenced last Thursday.
Marist's top returning scorer and leading
ed by 6'7" sophomore Steve Eggink, who
Pace surpassed Marist 4-3.
The program has taken a major step for-
candidate for
·
post-season laurels. The
had a fine rookie campaign before a knee
"This season was a learning experience
·
ward,
.
moving intoJhe
·
NCAA Division
J
:
..
·
former ECAC Rookie-of
-
the-Year: poured
·
injury
..
shortened -his season. Three top
.:
,
for both my girls and
·
I," said Coach Joe
'=
ranks after three years in Division II. The in 17.5 points per contest a year ago and
junior college players,'6'5" Daryl Powell,
Weil. "Everybody's game improved and
·
.
Red Foxes
will
participate iii the · newly
should become the Red Foxes' all-time
6'5" Ronnie Ryan, and 6'7" Eric Taylor we were an happy with the end results. As
realigned ECAC MetrO:-South Conference,.
·
scoring leader this season.
are all expected to have an immediate
-
im-
for next year, the dedication and strength
and play a schedule comprised of all Divi-
Marist
will
have plenty of talent at guard
pact on the program, as all are coming off seniors
·
Lisa Arcuri, Kathy Carmody, and
sion I foes.
·
·
besides Smith. Senior Todd Hasler, one of outstanding years with super teams. 6'8"
Nancy Colagrossi have contributed to the
The foundation of the Marist five
will be the East's premier shooters, was the Foxes'
·
freshman Ted Taylor is also ready to make
team will be hard to replace. But
if
all
senior
center
Anthony
"Moose"
·
second leading scorer with 15.4 points per
a contribution forthwith.
.
underclassmen return, we will have a tough
Timberlake, and junior guard Steve Smith. game last season. · Keith Denis, one of
Steadily improving Gil Padilla, a 6'7",
team to beat.
The
6'8"
·
Timberlake is a steady player, Marist's four junior coll_ege transfers, is
205 pound sophomore, will add depth at
center behind Timberlake.
WMCR
brings Red Foxes to the air waves
If you can't make it to the game, listen to
it on WMCR 91.9 FM. As they did last
week, WMCR will be broadcasting the Oc-
tober 31st football game between the Red
Foxes and Pace University. The action Barry Lewis will be handling the play by follows the Fox on campus the WMCR
starts at l :00
with the PRE-GAME play and John Petacchi will be doing the Sports team.
'
SHOW, and then live coverage starts at color commentary for the team thar ·
1 :30 when the whistle begins
to
start play.
-
-
----
-
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-
llect
-
FOxes
.
at
ho
Ille 56-16
by Bill Travers
-
--
-
·
--
; .
.
;,
- -
,
-~i::~~ we~t-:~~r~ig~{
\
~~kle to paydirt
-
·-
-
-
·
-
-
--
·
-
"
from the three; This plus Huber's conver-
.
What do yoti s~y about a game that you sion brougbithe
,
score to 14-7.
-
;
·
·
'
-
_
_
lose 56-16? What do you say about a gante
·
_-•
-
·
·
Marist's
''
defense stymied; Lowell
_
and·
-
__
when
.
your offense is
-
outgained 457 yards
-
forced a_fumblejust seconds afterMarist
·;
·
_
to
272? What do you say about a game
had scored. Brian Sewing smothered
_
the
where you lose the ball
5
times ~n fu~bles?
ball and Cleary and· company went to work
What do you say about a game hke.thts'?
-
--
once again, on the Lowell 27.
_
-
·
-
.
"There's not much
·
to
be
said,''. says
-
-
_
-
Faced with a fourth and five, Marist
_
coach Malet .
.
"You just forget about the
elected to try for a field goal.
-
}-Juber's bo.~t
gamt; and prepare(or next week.».·
__
·
was good from 27 yards out and Martst
Indeed, this is .what the Red Foxes are
_
was very much in the garne; trailing 14-10.
-
_
going to flave to do. They we~e h~ndled
_
But Marist's enthusiasm died right then.
,.
quite ~onv}ncingly by the Umversity of
Minutes later on
.
two
.
separate occasions
-
Lowell football squad last Saturday after-
_
Marisl coughed the. ball up on f~mbles
.
noon at Leonidoff Field.
-
which led to two quick TD's for Lowell.
Fumbles
_
during the
,
first
_
quarter by
The
'
score was 28-10 at h_alftime with
_
Marist
·
led to two Lowell touchdowns. Fae-
Lowell coasting the rest of the way;
.
·
_ '-
-
ed with a fourth down and long, Lowell
"We were very much in the game until
decided to punt. Dan Kl~dis went
_
deep
·
for
we started fumbling the ball," said Malet.
-
Madst to receive but slipped and f4mbled
"Four of our fumbles led to touchdowns
_
over to Lowell on. the Marist 26. Lowell
early in the game when we were still in it:
·
quarterback
Bill
Stecchi quickly conne_cted
The only excuse for this is a lack of c_oncen-
,
with a perfect strike to Mike Bergstrom
.
tration by our guys;"
_
.
-
who ran it in for six. The kick by Ron Pet-
,
-
While Lowen was running up the score in
-
tinelli was good and Lowell led 7-0.
-
the second half Marist running back Rori-
,
--
On th~ next series of
.
downs Marist again
surrendered the ball with a fumble; after
Mike Spawn had returned the kick off
_
30
__
yards to midfield. Stecchi went to work a~d
_
as the second
_
quarter
-
got
_
underway G~ry
Errico chugged in
•
from the three
.
The kick
was gooland Lowell led 14-0.
_
.
-
The
'
Marist offense was faultermg_on the
nie Shore single.handedly tore up the field
-
with a 28-yard touchdown run and
a:
total
of 78 yards on four carries. Jim Dowd
gained 81.yards on 15 carries; and Ron
_
Dimmie had 70m yards on 15 attempts. Foi:
Lowell, QB Stecchi was 12 for 19 in
_
the air
-
for 190
·
yards
-
and three touchdowns.
-
RB
Errico was impressive for Lowell, gaining
129 ·
-
yards on
_
22 carries and
.
two
touchdowns.
_
ensuing
·
set of downs, when Tom Huber
.
was sent in to
-
punt. Huber took the snap,
faked the punt and raced down
__
to the
EXTRA POINTS
Lowell 47 fcir a first down. This 'play plus
-
the insertion of QB Jim ClearyJ~ho had
The loss is the third in a row for Marist
missed Marist 's lastthree games with an in-
after a 2~ I start.
_
_
, --
-
_
_
jury
to
his throwing hand) seemed to bring
Lowell established a new record of most
-
Marist to life. On Cleary's first play from
points sci;,red with their 56-16 win.
scrimmage, he faked the handoff and took
-_
Marist's final home
..
game will be this
•
the ball on his own down to the Lowell 1 S Saturday at Leonid off Field against Pace
_
fora gain of 32 yards. Five plays later Ron
·
-
University.
Jim Dowd carrles
·
s of his 81 yardsas QB Randy Rosand (11) a~d RB Ron DlmGm
11
le (3h3)
look
on.
_
·
-
_
_
_
- _
_
•
' •
photo by Grace a
_
ag er
·
-,
,
,,-·
ScOreArtd Win
-
Week nuinb~r
two
:_
-
Our Sports Editor Barry
-
Lewis is very
upsef because he hasn
'.
t been able to give
away the Marist basketball' squads old
Jerseys an_d
.
other new, articles from
_
the
.
_ -
·-•
tvfai-ist
-
spe>rts teams.
_
To wir1,just answer as
~
:
:/,;.:,
niany...:sports
:,
questioris
·
as
-
-
-you
. can.
'
After
.-_-_
.
_·
the
·
;,yeek of October 29th, the person with
-_
_
the most ansYleied questions wins
.
lt's
that
simple. Just mail your answers
_
to CIRCLE
SCORE AND.WlN, P.O. Box.857; Marist
College. Enfries
-
subjeci
-
io judgement
·
or
CIRCLE
'
staff. No CIRCLE staff member
.
--
is eligible
to
win.
_
·
-
.
.
_
_
-
-
LAST WEEKS QUESTIONS:
1. Since 1903, how many times has there
not been a World Series?
-
-
-
·
2.
-_
How many home runs did Mickey
Mantle hit in World Series competition?
3. Name the player who holds the record
for most World Series hits in a lifetime?
_
4. Which former Yanke~ player.hit safely
-
inl7 consecutive World Series games?
-
.
_
.
5.
Who hit the first World Series home
.:~
·
·
rurrinYanke~Stadium?
_
·
-
-
THI$ WEEKS QU~STIONS:
, .
. ~
-
_
L
Who was the oniY Yankee who has
·
won
t"'.o
batting ti~les?
-
.
-
,
· 2. Who was th~ last playing manager to
-
·
,
lead hifleam
to
a'pe1.1nant?
:
: _
__
-
·
-
·
-
.
3. Who ihrew the 60th home run ball to
Babe Ruth in 1927?
/
.
·
.
.
_
,
4; Who threw the 61st home run ball to
.
RogerMaris
in
1961?
..
·
-
-
__
<.
S.
'°Which
-
Hall of Farner wore the
-
_
uniforms of all four New York teams: the
-
Giants, the Dodgers; the
·
Ya
'
nkees and the
-
Mets?
- ·
-
·
-
- ·
'~
·
:...
,...:
predicted finish- and out-ran over- l, 100
.
that kept Mike goin
-
g, as he was handed the
-
and that all that mattered was to finish.
-
other participants. His time of 3 hours 18
·
chocolate candy bar on the 59th Street
After that, I was running with a speed that
I can't imagine what it must be like. To
_
minutes and 37 seconds amazed_ him, but
Bridge and held on to it three miles later at
-
now makes
H
hard to believe. I averaged
byBarryLe~s
-
15e
·
a part of the 16,000 mer1 and women
.
his placing almost floored him. Finishing
the 18 mile mark. "I was afraid it
-
would the last two miles of the race in 7:34, and
who nervously, anxiously
·
stood before the 3445 out of 14,496 official runners
_
is a
melt, but I figured it would dojustas well
thefeelingwaswo!1derful."
starting line on the Verranzano Narrows
_
numberthatMikecouldnothavedreamed
·
as the bagel."
-
When he hit the wall, the
Bridge.
-
..
..
,
·
_ ·
about before ihe race, but one that now
.
pain was striving to burst out'. The veins in
"You are running thru. Central Park and
_
__
Ahead of them, 5 boroughs, 26.2
-
miles puts
a:
big grinning smile across his face.
the calfs got
.thicker
and the breathing was
there are twenty rows deep of people cheer-
-
and pain that is inconceivable. They were
heavier. The eyes see fog and the mind at-
ing and screaming you to the point of
from 50 states, tiny villages across the
"The whole race was
.
simply beautiful.
tempts to put an end to the suffering that - esctasy. When I looked up at the
·
clock just
globe. Participants were in wheel chairs
,
The weather was perfect ~nd sc,> were the
each limb in the body is receiving. The
before crossing the finish line, I jumped
and one one-leg. One
-
dribbled a basketball
-
people watching us run. In Brooklyn there
mind is playing tricks, but you have to con-
and just started screaming with joy. My
and another ran the entire race in a waiter's
were high school bands and in the Bronx · trol it.
-
.
two older brothers ran the race also, and
uniform,
·
balancing a bottle of mineral
-
stereos wen~
-
playing so loud that my ears
-
-
for the first time
·
we each were able to
water on a tray. Then there wa
·
s our own
were popping. The excitement motivates
"I was crying to stop, but then_ I realized
finish, and an
·
under four hours. I could
Marist. Marathon Man himself, Mike you so much that you just forget about
that I have
_
been training for three months.
have gone another
_
ten miles after that.
Chung.
-
_
__
running and appreciate eyerything
·
that is
All that preparation would be wasted if I
Well, maybe not ten, but my body felt so ·
·
Mike ran the New York City Marathon
-
-
around you. You reaHy get psyched up.'J
stop, so it became mind overthe body, with
well conditioned that at the time
it
seemed
_like he never ran before. He out-ran his
-Instead of a bagel,
it
was a Hershey Bar
my mind signaling that all wou_l,d. be well,
_
lik~ a good idea.tt
'
,
~
~
-~
.
.
.
.
.
;
.
,
.,
,,
:
.
,
.•
.
'
.,
':.
.
.
'
.
.
.
}
,_
)
.
.
.
•
·
s
·
.,;_.
.
·
.
---.-.:.
·
':-
·
26.6.1
26.6.2
26.6.3
26.6.4
26.6.5
26.6.6
26.6.7
26.6.8
26.6.9
26.6.10
26.6.11
26.6.12
"~~-r-.. -.....
~-·~~-=--... ,. __ .:... .. -.. :.-..
:~-
-
~
:· -..
'•
.
-
.
-
-·--·-
.
·-·
-
..
"·--
.
.
••.
-
.
::
.
.·
..
'·
-
.
-
·_.
·.
~-
.
~
.-:
-
_ Par~ Plac~
getS;
long-awaitec,lfiOt water
·
-~
.
.:,.,
~·.
.
'.'.
':,_
'
by Bill Travers ;
.
.
owner
oi
Park Plac~.
uj
was n~t notified
w~ ·. would- c~~~ert tci
g~s)~
Pavelc~ said.
.
about the problem until a week after," said · ''The ·electric water heaters are the mosf txs ·
A new .gas heater ~as installed in the
Regini. "I sent niy.electrician ouno check
pensive.to
·
use and the least efficient.·Gas .
.
_.,,
',
.
.
'
.
.
of
by
Regi~i. Gas shipments·
will
be
paid
for by Marisi; as is done with electric bills
of the other heaters. ·
;, Park Place·dormitories on· Oct. 23, ending -·the situation. He reported back to me that
will be-cheaper, but most importantly ir
three weeks without hot water for ten ·• all fuses were. working, which meant that
will be more efficient for the students.,,
residents.
the hot water heater should have been
lnsiallatiqn of the new gas system started
. "It's about time," said
if
relieved Sue. worlcingalso."
:. on Oct. 23, 16 days after. the problem
Goldfeder; resident of Park Place. "It
.
..
. -;;
·
.
arose; "I was under the impression that the
. . "What upset me the most wa~ that, the
_ students were·kept in the.dark throughout
· the · whole period," said · Jeanne Le
Gloahec, resident of Park Place. "We had
should not have taken as long as it did for it
After more tha_n a week without . hot ; heater would be installed while the students
to be fixed. It's really inconvenient
to
have
water, a reas<;>n sttll had not been f?Und. · were on their mid-term break, Seeger said. ,
to walk through freezing temperatures and
More complaints to Seeger. forced h11?1 to.
"It
seemed like the most convenient time
rain, just to take a shower in someone · - contact Andy Pavelco, physical plant dJTec-: but instead Regini waited ,,
·
'
else's rooin."-
tor (maintenance).
u1
sent a Marist electri-
·
· .;; .
The proolem began on Oct, 7 w)len five ,cian to check out the situation," said· ·-. Currently the
n~room
building's water
rooms had no hot water. According to
Pavelco. "He-told me that the coils that
is heated by· three separate heaters. The
·, housing directqr Geoff Seeger, word did
heat the water were crudded and
full
of new gas heater is Japanese ·built, equipped
no.t reach hiin-until at least four days after -· lime. This would naturally cause the system
with an autmatic shut off system. "We are
the proble~ had surfaced. "I ·was .to · to be faulty. We knew ~ight then that in-
not concerned about saving money as much
understand the P,roblem to be for one stallation of a new water heater was
as.to provide our students with an efficient
room," Seeger said. "Not until several
necessary." .
.
.
.
system," said Pavelco. The other two
days after did I understand that it affected
On Oct. ·.
16,
Regini
and . Marist · heaters are electric, .one of which was ins
many others as well." .. ·
. ·
maintenance discussed the process of.cori-
stalled last year when a similar -situation
Seeger then called maintenance, which
verting. Th_t: decision _to convertto gas was - arose.. ·
..
.·
. _ .
relayed the message to Ivo Regini, the . agreed upon. "We decided right away that ·
The cost of installation will be taken care
no .idea when_ we would get-hot water or
even if the situation was being corrected.
There must be a lack of. communication
somewhere, because when we asked Geoff
(Seeger) or maintenance, we never got any
concrete answers."
: "With the tuition we pay here at Marist,
you would think that a problem like this
could be handled better," said LeGloahec.
"I don't like being kept in the dark."
. -~~rk Place is an off=campus housing
fac1l1ty rented by Marist. Marist has rented
Park Place by semesters for the past two
years.
It
is located five miles north of.cam-
pus on Route
90
in Hyde Park, and houses
38 students. -
THE
CIR.~LE
.
. . .
.
.
..
.
. .
.
. .
.
WMCRtoget
A..P~
teletype
•
-,news. service
Marl~t College P_'?ughkeepsie,
N.
Y.
-
~f,;t:cf[
!t~,1!!~~~,i~~!}~~:~;·
will-.· have.· an , Assoc1atecl ·_. J>ress teletype :_
>,.·· · •
· ·
machine instaiied · in its,.newsrooin;
.
accor-. .
<·::
ding to the co.::news directors, Qi!lny Lu~
':
.
cianoandPaulMurnane., · • -:·--• ··
·
;The A.P, machine_res.embles -a .sm~B:
typewriter .. News; (!!atureaqd_ spor_ts st?r!eS
_ are·relayed from theAs~oc1ated Press of-.
:-:nee in New York City, through telephone
. ---- wires to the machine. The machine _then
print~ out- these. stories like. a !ypewri!er.
· "It's the·most basi~ piece of equipment ma
newsroom/' Luciano said ..
'>·
·.·
·.·· .. ·, · '
,
-
Volume
26,
Number
6 -
October
29, 1981
-.Th~ A;P. inachin~operates seven days a
week '24: hours a
:cfay;.
"H provides up-t0;-
the-Jriiriuie·, n~ws; desperat~ needed._ for
. professionaHsm • in news _reporliJ?g,'},· s~id
Luciano;
.
. .
.
:7
.
·.·
: .·.
>· -·,. ·
; ..
WMCR's
~ews staffJfrornJeft ,~·rightfBarry
Lewis,
Paiii ~~r~a~e·.
itrilGin·~y
Lu~ia-no~
<
-:-
; "The'addition of the machine represents
.
. . . .
_
.
_
a
360degree turn in the station's (lews·.and .
9:30
a.m.
and
6
p.m. Ne~swriters read the
$70musibep~id we~kly.
.
·'
"WMCR is big 'this' ye~r~. and C.S.L.
sports reporti11g,,, said Barry Le~is; s_p9rts' . Poughkeepsie Journal, pick out important
.
-
Luciano· said that' originally the station
probably fig_ured "'.~ coul<! use th~ ~Oney.:·
. director at
WMCR,."With the wire seTVJce, :news. stories· and re-write. them. With the
had · put in ··
a·:
request : for two new · Murnane said. Luciano aaded, It s a big
especially.
in _sports,
110
othe~/adio _stati?n A. P. machine~ the news at
WMCR will be·· typewriters when ·. they w_ere informed by
push for communi~ations."
.
· in the country will beat us, · ~ew1s said. - broadcast more _efficiently and frequently, . Dean Cox that C.S.L. might have enough
"We'll·· no' longer need.· to. depend on ·Lucianosaid~- .
.
_
>money to cover a wire-copy machine. Mur-
newspapers
~
everything is current·=-- this ,- The Council of Student Leaders has sign-'- . nane · · checked out- price quotes and
puts
WMCR on:the same level asany .net- . ed a two-year contract to cover the .costs of - presented them to Dean Cox a! the beginn- ·
work inthe.couritry,"Lewissaid,
·.
_.the·
A.P. machine Murnane said. In-
ing of'.the semester. Last Wedne.sday Dean
. WMCR
currently. broadcasts_ news_ at stallation will cost
$250,
and rental fees of · Cox harid~d
W~CR
the signed contract. -
·· "WMCR
is attempting to become a com-
munity statio·n rather than just a campus
station," said Luciano. "The win~ ~ervice
will make this goal more possible."
3from
Maristto be
-featured on documentary
.,(
-
.
.,
·--
-
-
.
.:
-
:
by
Marianne Beyer
--
. Two Marist students and a staff member
will be featured in
a
CBS News documen-
tary ·about teenagers living with "partial vi-
sion."
·
_
.
Sophomore Jay Stone· and freshman
Paul Sforza· will appear on
"30
MINUTES,". a weekly news magazine for
-teenagers. Special Services counselor Har-
. riet -Peavy is interviewed by CBS cor~
-
--.
..
respondent Betty Ann Bowser as part of a
ten:minute segment -called "See-Minus,"
due to air
1 :30
p.m. Saturday.
·
- - Sto~
and Sforza, partially sighted since
birth, explain• the problems of l}_aving po(?r
eyesight. They have visual impairments
that. cannot be corrected to the normal
· ·20120
leveL Caused by heredity, disease, or
accidents, partial vision is· a handicap
which affects reading skills, distance and
depth perceptio'i1; and mobility._Even sim-
What'~ happening on Hallow~en
......
New program for disabled
pie tasks like typing a paper or seeing the television cameras and producers that
blackboard are--· extremely difficult and followed him around New York City for a
sometimes impossible for the partially day. At a summer seminar _for the partially
sighted.
··
·
-. sighted in Syracuse, New. York; Sforza
describes what it's like to know he'll never
drive a car~ he can't pass the Motor Vehi-
cle eye exam necessary for a valid driver's
license .
There are hundreds of thousands of
teenagers in America afflicted with partial
. vision, and many optical aids are being
developed across
-
the country. Stone
demonstrates the use of one such aid, the
-Visual Tek electronic magnifier, for the
\
,
-page3
Marist graduate Len Travaglione, now a
rehabilitation counselor for the New York
State Commission for the Blind and Visual-
ly Handicapped, appears i_n the news piece
and defines the legal rights of partially
sighted students. These include i;:ligibility
for financial aid, access to optical aids, and
funds to hire readers for schoolwork pur:
poses.
Marist College served as the starting
point for the news story's research and tap-
,
-
.. -_ page 3
ing, with other locations including New
York <:ity, San Francisco, and Long
L _____
_;, __________ ..;__...;., ____
- : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - -
Island.
'
\!
•'
i
2
.
•
·
THE CIRCLE·
October 29 1981
.
-
All leitera must be
typed
triple
s~ace with a 60 apace margin
,
and
·
a~bmllted lo the
·
.
Circle
office
no later than
6
p.m
.
Monday
.
Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
.
right
10 edU
au
leUers. LeUers mus!
be signed
,
but
names may be withheld
upon re-
-
quest. Leu!rs
will
be publlshed depending upon avallablllty of space
. ·
.
.
/
Financial ~id fight
To the Editor:
.
·
what amounts to a 35 percent
Students at independent univer-
decrease in
.
the National Direct
sities cannot fight the trend of an-
.·
Student Loan program and a 42
·nual
tuition
increases-tight? .. percent cut in Pell grants. But the
.
.
·
Right. Can they combat
.
ever
full Senate has not yet voted on
·
worsening inflation? Not really
:
appropriation
figures
;
..
and
·
But students can fight to preserve therefore, if students act quickly
student financial aid programs· the news need not be grim. .
that make it possible for hundreds ·
Flood your senators with letters
•
of thousands to study at their tellirig them you oppose cuts that
.
·
chosen
.
university.
may make independent
.
univer
~
.·
·
If
President Reagan succeeds in shies havens (or the rich. Don't
his
·
campaign
promise
to wait until the cuts affect your own
drastically cut the federal budget, pocketbooks because then it will
many students can kiss their be too late
.
An education system
federally guaranteed loan of Pell based on the ability and desire of
grant, among other loans and students to learn rather than the
.
grants, goodbye
.
ability to pay is essential to a
.
"Given the large number of democracy.
loans issued in
1981
and the con-
So write to your senators and
current debt service,
it
is likely no representatives (but particularly
.
new loans could be issued in
.
to
.
senators because the Senate is
Spread the
-
Word
.
.
1982,"
_
said New York State RepubHcan-controlled) and make
Education Department Commis-
your opinions count. You repre.:
-
sioner Gordon Arnbach, speaking sent a)arge voting bloc that can-
r~ently before a group of higher not be ignored, unless, of course,
education representatives
:
"The you choose
·
to
-
ignore cuts that
effects for higher education will would threaten the caliber and ac-
.
be devastating, particularly for cessibility of higher education in
To ket?p up a good relationship in the col-
The Maristcollege
_
Radlo station, WMCR,
lege among the students, fac
.
ulty and
offers several outlets for both students and
student financial aid
,
" he said, in this country.
·
discussing Mr. Reagan's budget
Michael Caruso
organizations, as
·
well as the "outside
faculty to publicize events and voice opl-
world," the most important tool is a working
nions
,
as Well as to participate in the radio
cutting proposals.
.
Executive Director of
·
In
.
other
·
grim news, · a Senate
the Independent
system of communications within the col-
programming format. The Circle is open for
lege. Much goes on every day here that
all forms of campus communications, such
subcommittee has
.
appropriated
Student Coalition
should not be dismissed with
"I didn't know
as letters, guest editorials, classified
.
ads,
about it," in sight of the fact that there are
articles, calendars, photographs, and press
media such as the newspaper and the radio
releases.
Storage service,
stati?n to keep people_ in
_
formed.
In making use of these opportunities, in-
·
.
.
-
.
..
.
.
. It 1s bo~h a right ~nd a responsibility of
.
dividuals, as well as organizations
;
can
·
.
.
.
. .
·
·
·
..
.
e_veryone
_
m the Manst community to par-
.
reach the Marist community
.
and
·
offer
a
..
_
TotheEd1tor'.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
,
som<:.!fhatcentr_aU~located.
. .
.
.·
.
.
· .
:-
.
-
t1clpate
.
m and
·
respond
..
to the
-
dayst~day
.·
,._-:-,
·
.
.
.
·
·
.
..
_
.
\d
:
•
d·
.
th
· •
·
h
.
·
h·h
:
i
f
;
:
.
.
, ·
..
Ro~e Kno.(l_ Fa~m 1s offeIJng_
~
,
Bndget ~ew1s
_
1s
)
~l!r student
.·
,._
..
,
. ---
...
.
_
.
.
.
.
.,
•
.
.
.
, ..
.
•
.
.
.
.
. .
.
....
campus
w
e
.
me 1um
roug
W IC
nor
.
. ,
·
Storage
•
··
Serv1ce
·
for
the
·
Mar1st
..
representative at
·
Martst College
·
,;.,
.
··
··
·,
.
·
..
· .. ,-,_
·
·
e'4en\s
··
and happen\ngs
··
\lia.t
·
estab\ish
·
the
·,,
·
··
··
-
\\ ·
·
.
.
..
...
i1'
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•
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o
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·.
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·
·
·
·
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can
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-
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Cohiini.mity.
·
,There
_.
is
a,
short.-
BoxC405;
Campus
exL
1
f7
_ '
:'
,
\
"•:'.""'""'~
-
·~
~
·
"
"''
severai\vays toencourage p~rti6ipation
··
and
.
•
:
,
_
r-impu~dme
"
t° .
.
r\~es on ~or:nm
_
t"'
Y,{e_ac-
·
·
.
·
)
·
term
-
service
··
for Christmas,
.
for
·
·
Our 'phone
384~6626.
·
·
Please
response
or
.
to voice d
i
ssatisfaction
'
·
.
1
\
a,n
par \f'ga ;tn, ~n
.
thn
_
urn
·
1 c~n
_
·
six
·
weeks, and also for the sum-
call evenings
.
through t'hese media that exist on campus
.
.
wf or dor uds aft
'
.Y
eeping
.
efcambpllus •~:
.
.
.
mer,vacation, for t~ree months.
,
Louis Indeli_<;ato
.·
t
·
b t·
C?rme cin
°
enng
.
a means
O
pu
.
cop,
·
Pick up and delivery would be
con n u ions.
1:11on.
·
·
The 'perfect'
.
pap¢1"
.
.
Volunteers needed
.
.
Everyone has a complaint forThe Circle
.
_
We never
-
claimed to
be
the pelfect college
·
newspaper although
_
some people seem to
expect absolute perfection from
-
a staff that
is stil) learning.
·
.
·
··
. ·
·
.
··
,
.
Students constant1y_
·:
complain
--
,
tha.
_
t we
..
take issues
too
lightly, yerone of ourtargest
·
problems is tile lack of interested writers at
Marlst. College
.
If you think we
~
take our
issues too light!y, then how abouLjoining
the staff? Every student has the opportunity
to write forThe
.
.
Clrc.le,
.
~
.
. .
.
,~
.
:
,
.
,
··
Administrators complain we get the facts
mixed up and that our stories are one-sided.
..
Yet when we try to get an interview, we're
never.taken seriously.
·
.,
There are many other complaints cir-
..
culating around campus about the quality of
The Circle
.
However,
the Editors of The
_
Cir
-
·
cle can count the number of complaints that
.
· have
.
been addressed to us on our fingers.
·•
We certainty hope
·
y~u're
-
·impressing
·
so-
meone
by
laughing at
a
mistake in the Cir-
·
cle, be~ause judging from reactions to o~r
mistakes, they certainly don't bother many
people.
·
,
··
Perhaps with the
.
facilities Mari st offers
The Circle we should feel obliged .to put out
Co-Editors
a perfect paper every week. How man
·
y peo-
.
pie reading the Circle have ever
.
visited The
.·
·
yq the
Editor
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
Circle Office? It's in Room
168
in
the
Cam-
· ·
.
Sevefariocal schools and agen-
·
· pus
'
Center. Come
·
on down and visit us
'
cies are looking for college stu-
·
.
some
>
ume
>
·
Just excuse the walls that
dent volunteers to work as tutors
haven't been_ pai!'lt~d
.
fofrrtWlY, many y~~rs
;
•
and/or aidesi_11 their prograi:n on
Also
.
plEfa.se
·
excuse
·
the assorted discarded
..
'
•·
·
a
'
weekly
·
basis
;
approxih]at
_
ely
•
2
furniture that
.
has ended_up in The Circle of-
.
to 4 hours
,
.
,
·
;
.
_
Students who are seriously con-
sidering a
·
career in teaching or
child · -care services are most
desirable. lfyou would like to be
a volunteer, please contact me in
-
-
·
Room
266,
Campus Cent
.
er;
_
,:"
'
;
·•
·
Elizabeth Nolan
.
·
..
Alcohofawareness .
.
,
.
.,
fice
:
We don'.t mind though; lt's
:
the two
'.
(and
only)
'.
broken
:
typewriters that cause
'~
us
·
pro
~
blems when we're trying to write a story
.
.
··
.
··
·
.
It seems that we g~t
.
the tm
.i
ntQf the corn-
.
plaints, yet we're expected to put up with a
lack of student interest, administrative
·
cooperation and good facilities.
.·
·
·
•
To the Editor:
:
..
,
.
.
We have organizelan Alco'hol
·
Don't worry, though, we're learn!ng to
There is a fqrce on campus con-
Awareness
-
,
Week slated
•.
for
cope and we're going to hang in there. Give
,
cerned
.
about
:
the abu
.
se
:
of. November
2-6.
We are having
us a hand Instead of. your criticism. Com-
·
alcohol. Its
·
members include
speakers, panels, films, exhibits
plain all you want
,
but on_ly you, Marist Col
-
.
·
.
students
.
.
from
·.
Freshmen
to
in the Galary, and Pub Night with
,
·
.
lege, can make The Circle b~tter •
. ::,
.
.
.. ·
·
Seniors, faculty members, and
.
WMCR.
.
.
·
-
.
•
~
.
-
·
·
.
·
.
<
,
.
What would happen ifT~e Circle did11't
;
·
·
_
staffmeinbers.
:
.
..
--
.
.
.
.
.
.
> .
,
come out one week because we didn't have
·.
Our
.
purpose
i
s
·.
to inform·
·
·
u
you don't do anything ~lse
enough stories, or no ~ne would give us very
·.
students about the possible
·
pro-
.
.
that week try to attend at least one
good information, or
.
worse
;
>
because we
blems
~
relatecr
:
to
·
alcohol.
-
-
We
·
of the events
;
You never
·
know
;
it
·
didn't warit to bring o
·
ur
.
own typewriters
.
don't
want
to
preach
nor do we
could be fun!
down to the office
;
·
Few people appreciate
·
want everyone
to
stop drinking.
The Circle, but what
'
s a Thursday afternoon
We want to curb some of the pro
0
-
without The
Circle
to laug
_
h at?
,
· _
blems associated with the abuse
of alcohol.
News Staff
. J\nne Keating
.
.
Chairman, Task Force
,
-
on Alcohol Abuse
Denise
Film,
Patrick
.
Lowell,
·
Karyn Magda!en, John Kraus,
·
'
Joanne Holdorf, Pat Brady
Jackie COnti, Barbara LaDuke
Business Manager
Maggie Browne
Jane Hanley
Terri Sullivan
Barry Lewis
"'arttetlng/Advertlslng
•
Jeanie O'Rourke
Joann Buie
The
Circle
Associate Editor
-;-,.
Feature Edlt~r
Staff
Rick O'Donnell
Theresa Sullivan
Donna COdy, Christine Dempsey,
Pet~r Fredsall, Karen Johnson,
Joanna Rosato, Patti Walsh
Sports Editor
Staff
.
.
Copy Editors
·
Nancy Brennan, Tim Dearle,
Tim Breuer, Pat Cullough,
·
Karen Flood, Denise Film,
John Petacchl, Ken Bohan,
Bill Travers, Dennis Martin
Thomas Shannon
Business Manager
.
Maggie Browne
.
·
Dlstrtbutlon Manager
Terri Tobin
Photography
Maggie Browne, Grace Gallagher
Cartoonists
Michael Moore
·
Eddie Powers
Social Editor
Allison McCarthy
Janel McNamara
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw
·,
·
-
·...:··
,·
·
I · ,
-
-
•
·
-
:
.
·
.
.
-
·.
•
·
7
'
.
'
-.
:
:
,
~
.,
...
'
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-~ ·
.
:
·-
·
·.
·
·
,.
.
.
.
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:·
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··_
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"
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.·
·octobet29
19B1-THECIRCLE~Page3--
.
.
\
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:
~~~f'!JJ#!ftli
;,;
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disQbled
:
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tiy
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P~•~rF~!i
;
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t
,
):'.'.
•
·:·
:,
··
:,
.
.
\>\
Disabl~ studerits·wil~
.
~
-
~i,1~
·
to earri
.
on~
..::
towaritheir' future employment':"
·
.'
·
.-
.
:
·
'
·:
:
.
·.
"The community was
.
starving for this,•~
:,•: ·
' ::
:./·
....
·.
· --
:
:··
'!
·. ·
:>/
:
· ·
,
.
.
.
:'.(
,
:
,>
·
::
credit.if they:enroll for
a
~einester ofswim~
:
.
:
.
.
Interested students
.-should
contact
·
the
·
.
said Pirerra.
-
.
.
_
.
.
:
:c··:
Manst
·
College
w_ill
,
SQ!)n~:
~e: starting
a
.:
~ing
t~is
~pring
at
the McCann ce·nter:
•
•
',
:_
•Special·
·
Services
-
·
-·
office in
·,
Champagnai·
·
·
·
AsJor the students, she. said the program ·
· ·
P[Ograrn that offers h¢li>•ii
·
ndJccreation to
_;:::,::
According
:
to Special
'.
Services
:
.
Director
Room 105.
·
.
0
·
.
:
will "supplement· the educationar
:·
ex-
·
·
: ·
dis~bled pe!sons, as
-
\vell as
~·
voluritetr
.
ex-
·
: .
Diarie
·
Pirerra, an aide
-
training program
•
·
·
perience it gives to
.
the disabled, and pro-
_
pen~ncc; to interested st'1'dents~
.
:
.
·
:
.
. ·
.
.
.
wiU be held at Mccann on Nov. 7 and 8.·
Pirerra said thafa Red Cross
·
represen-
vide something that is both educational and
Hs called. the
:"
Adaptive Aquatics pro~
:
During those two
,
days, students
-
who
tative, Dav,d Burick,
-
approached Marist recreational."
~gram,
and
·
it w11l
·
:t,ecome
,
a
·
:
one
·
credit
-,
vohmtcer
will
be taught the skills needed to
with the idea
of
finding a place that could
Pirerra added that Special Services and
special topics course
for
.
spring semester. In
:
-
work
.
with
-
persons afflicted with various
offer pool-time to the Poughkeepsie com-
Red Cross representatives, who will be pro-
the progra~, Marist students will be taught·
·
physical disabilities.
.
·
·
.
munity, which offers little recreation to its viding the aid training instruction, would
to
.coa~h disabled in<lividuals
:
who will be
.
.
·
~
-
Pirerra urged students
.
to get involved,
.-
large disabled population. The program probably be able to arrange an alternate
sw1mmmg for recreational and therapeutic
saying
-
"it's
·
an excellent learning ex-
wiU be open to Poughkeepsie residents as date for students unable
10
free themselves
reasons.
.
..
.
, .
.
perience for- them -
and it can be .used well as students.
.
on Nov. 7 and 8. •
i
Anders~n stciges original
..
•,
.
On November 12-15 an original musical
.
is a play "about fragmentation,-both on a
will..be
.
·
presented
-
in the Marist
·
theatre.
societal level
.
and an interpersonal level,"
"Graffiti," written by
·
Dave Heckendorn, ·said Don.aid Anderson, director of the
play.
.
.
Halloween
.
haunts
,~
·
Anderson, who is presently an adjunct
professor
·
of English, joined the Marist
·
staff in 1970. His early involvement with
·
the theatre followed· the traditional path;
For those
of
us who will not be in the
high school, college, and community
right state of mind to change our
theatre as an actor. In 1974 he helped form
costumes
•
and go out after the house
-
·
.
"Troupe,'.'
·
a theatre group, with BillDavis
.
parties and mixers this weekend; don't
and Tanya Dumont.
-
·
fret; Poughkeepsie's night spots will be-
·
ProductiOns
·
previously directed
v,
:
"witch" us all!
. ·
.
_
Anderson were the "Bald Soprano" in the
.
-.
First on the agenda, on Thursday, for
Spring of 1979 and "A Midsummer's Night
those who like to stretch the
-
weekend,
,
Dream" in the fall of that year.
.
.
.
The Chance
.
is having a
-
free party
.
.
The
"About that same time I started writing
best of Bruce Springsteen, South Side
plays of my own. Right now I have about a
.
,
Johnny, The Blues
,
Brothers and,giany
half dozen one
:
acts and I just finished my
more
will
be
-
hearg from
.,
"Onyx."
-
secpnd full length," said Anderson. Three
·
·
Prizes for the best costumes including a
of
jhese
one acts
will
be performed in
·
$100 cash prize for 1st place. On Frid~y
Poughke.epsie over winter intercession in
night, it's '
.
'Blotto-ween" with "Goofy
:
January.
_
•
Rock>' recording artist "Blotto'
·
' and
·
Anderson's attraction to the theatre lies
special guest "Mission." Prizes
will
be
in the factthat he both likes it and hates it;
'Graffite" cast members Mike Moore and Elisa Morris at rehearsal last Friday
.
photo by Terri Sullivan
I
.
'
.
given
·
again for the
.
best costumes. You
a factthat intrigues even himself. "I find
s •
·
•
T
l
·
t
k
>/j'J
·
willalsobeheardHveonWPDH-1-M.
.
that lam actracted toit sometimes
-
even
.
zngzng
.J.
e earams
Q
e
O
-~;
. .
At Noah's Ark a cosiume Halloween
.
against my
will.
There are times when I am
·
·
_
0
.
.
·
/:
1
party starts at IO. p.m; Prizes_ ·wm
_
be
.
~o fed up w~th 3:11 of it. yet
~ ~~d f!!Yself be-
·
.
While
.
they ~re not singing for their sup-
also plan t~ visit the children'~ ward of St.
'.;
·
!
awarded. A_t the Ntte <;aP
1
5.pec1al d
,
rmk
.
mg
_
d,~awn ~18-ht b_ac~ 1~to
It,
sa~d. Ander-
·
per anymore, they are still singing. Marist
.
Francis Hospital, dressed in costumes, to
·
i
1
ra!es, costume party with pnze_s and sur-
.
·
_
S?~•; I begm _to ~hsh_ke Jt because Jt JS S? ar-
College
.
Council on Theatrical Arts (MC-'
read b
_
edtime stories to the children.
.
.
. .
·
'
,
;
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im~~.?':ing
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not ~ecessary. Kam1kaze
,;_
and,- M~l~!!..
..
musical.
.
. It wa$yc;ry E.1
.
ffi~~lt
,
because we
~
-
::
'
Singing
·
telegrams and bedt
,
ime stories
.
plays we do."
·
,
.
.
-
-·
i
'
I
.
·
.
_
<
~~11_
.
.
,
~!t~ts,
.
are
--:
f~~~ur,ecL at
~
a
,·
reduced
.
·
.
•
.
we!eJqokmgfo
_
r n~m-tr~d1t1ortal--types
·
-
,of
•
:
:
:
·
can be
~~~t
an)'.where on
.
campus, delivered
In this sen~e f'.'1ariststudents are reac~ing
h
J
·
:
_
.·
_.·.
~:
J'r!ce_~ps
cents.
·
··
.
.
·:
-
•
.
- .
,
.
0
; , ,
•.
,
.
:
\'
.
otc:s
-
a!id
;
t~mgs
_
ltke
.
that because.~~ re
.
·
.
by an appropnately d~essed •
.
•messenger,"
beyond the ~1m1ts of the campus and mto
,
t\~
-
--
.
·
.. ..,
.-
'.:
·,
··
Whatbett~r way to
_
end tltew~kend_
~
-
eal!n~/ ~!1s1cally. w1
.
th non-trad1t1onal
through this new proJect. These messages
thecommumty_.
.
.
.
t
r
~-:·
,
,
_
:
t!t~n t9,top
Jt
offon Sunday.
.
~1gh~ at
.
~usic;
:
said Anderson:
_
.
.
_
.
_·
.
can b~ bought for
_
$1.50 on W~dnesday
_
The expenence
·
with
·
.
the singing
n
.:_
·
,'
-
~_
l
'_•
.
-
_
:
·
_• •
'
Skinner
s'!
-
A COS!Um_e partY.
:
b~gms at 7
·
. .
·
·•
~h~fe
-
are however very
_
fe~. proble!1!~
_
nights
m
the caf~tena. Dawn-Mar~e Sturte-
_
telegrams has so far pro~ed to be successful
!I,
p.m. The first pnze ~s
-
$~51~5ash,and
Jae.mg :t~~-_casLaf!d
,
crew of Graffiti,
.
.
.
'-
.
vant;
:
·an executive member
.
,
ofMCCTA;
·
·
and personally rewarding, "The people
~
1
.
1
.
'
:
•
there are three $~0 prize~
:
111:c~~,
,
~s
:
~~11:
::
'!ll1c~
_
1s
,:
surpr1~1ng;~s
.
the. play
,
!_las
,
never
,
0
says t
_
hat t~~y •~lighten the spirit and add a
·
who have rec~ived them have been surpris-
.
l
it
l::·
as $10 and
$5 pr~zes'.
<
..
\"
=•
r
,:
· ;
.
'.
.
,
·
·
,
_
_
bee11s~aged befo_re. T~e b1g~~~t pro~le~
J
,
..
touch of fun~ they're a novelty."
.
.
ed
_
and receptive- no one has taken offense
.
. ·
_so remember
to stay mco~tume_and
:_
have Tl~ht
,
now IS keepmg everyoJle.~aPJ?Y
_
. .
Another means
in w
_
hich the MCCTA
is
.
to them," saysMs. Sturtevant..
.
.
'
'
\t
trick or treat at l:lll the localJ11ght-spot~.
and:the1r
_
eyes foc~sed on the
·
goal,
_
said
:
developing this project extends beyond the
.
So don't run away the next time you see
~t
_
{!
_
.
It's a gc,odway to party;UP ,a?d
t
~e~ain·
~:
~nder
1
sod,1~;yt~e.~lay seems to be crystalyz.,
.
;
campus
;
The East Park Home
{onhe
Aged
..
an·
.
oddly d~essed person _c<?ming do~n
.
!he
1:
!i'; •
anonymous at t~esame!101
_
e:
"::.>
:
·
-
.
.
·
;
mg~
.
.
1r.ect
it.
·/
·
,
is going
•
to be yisited by
,
members of the
·
. hall-you m1ghtbe
_
the rec1p1ent of a s1ngmg
· f
l
·
·
.
· ·
· ·
·-
· ' ·
·
·
·
·
·. ·
·
club every two \veeks and delivered happy
·
telegram or be~time story yourself.
!t."
_:,~
,
bjrthday mes~ages for the.residents:'.
_
They
·
_
.
.
·
.
·
t
r
·
.
,
Black
Sheep
P1~)fi-Jgg~e
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·
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·
w
I d"
·
N Y they are also working on an album m
·
Jamaicans to look to
A
.
frica when_.
·
a black • i
_
n
-
spreading th
_
is
music to
_
E
_
urope, Canada,
J
L
_
:'.-
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. .,.
.
. -.
·
-
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~[!gmate
_
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:
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ama1ca,
:,
_
~st
_
.
n 1es are
·
• • .
. .
.
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_.·
,
-~- .
.
,
b~c;1)ntiilg
_
iilcr
_
easingty
·
·_
pop\llar ;,ln~ Black
-
Bearsv11Je st11d10 m \Voodst'?ck.
.
.
king would be crowned.
. .
.
:: :
Ainerica and Africa. Other great .Reggae
.
l
··'.
.
'
,;,
>>:t
:
;
:~
·
Sheep l>roJ.!ght
~hese
s~un~s t
_
o Manst
-
~ol~
-
·
-
Black .
.
Sheep got t<>geth~r;
,
1n Ph1!~delp~1a
~
-
-
The religion
·
is not
.
ail
·
organized one
.
artists include Peter Tosh, Dennis Brown
·
m
::
_:::"
S
_
:-~•-~
.:
;
lege lasfFriday
.
riight,
.
-
.·
:
·
,
·
. · .
.
: :
·: ,
_ •· ·
and allits _members are Yfe~t Indians with
Some Rastas. believe
_
S~lassie "."as a pr?p~et and Burtjing Spe
_
ar.
.
-
~
·
.
. 0:F
.-:
}
~
:
.c,'.::\
MiklM:iiler
,
organized the concert' which
•
·t
he_ exception
·
of one
_
A~encan
.
keybo~rd
_
.
.
a~ ~thers beh~ve he was
.
God or the remcar-
Freedom, peace and ~he exodus of . all
01
_
·
,.
,
.
>
.
:
was
:
s orisQred
.
b _
,
.
cua,
·::
Black- Student artJsL
_
Peter Graham and D~lrog Smith . nation ofJesus.
. . .
;
·,
.
.
.
.
. .
blackpe<;>ple
.
b_ack to ,:'-fnca
_are
~eoccurmg
tl:
=
·
;.
~ n : ~ n p _ w ~ &
:-_
TQl<J).l'l'
_
Jl'§,uC~as)~o~; s
_
p~fl
-_~?nte··pop~lar-reggae
,
hits
_
'
_bet.W.eerL
:
-
,
M~sLRastas
.
are
,
.vegetanans
-
who
.
.
also
..
the!":~s
_
1
_
!1
..
.!,h_1~
•
.
~llS
_
I~
~~1ch
IS
largely
~'
.
··
'
.
_
<
at large
·
as
Mike hopeµ
·
but those who at-
sets.·
. .
-:
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·:
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.
·-
·
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.,,.~:-
· ·
,
.
-,:-
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a~stan~
•
f!-0m~al~ohol· and t~b~cco:: T-here
-poht1caL,
_
. _
-
-.
,
;
.
.
. . __
_
· .
.
-: --
-
.
_
-
:
.
~
,
..
,
,
-
tended thoroughly enjoyed themselves and
,
.·
. Reggae. music _developed m
.
t~~
late
_
six-
.
!"ost d1stmgmshmg charactensuc <;>f Rastas
-
!3lack
_
Sheep will be performm~
next
·
~n
, -
t,"
!
,:,
.
·
./
the ·concert soon
>
became a private party
.
ties and _1s dominate~
.
by ~l;ISICJans
,
who
IS the dread locks they
_w_ear
which form
Fnd~y, O~tober 30 at the Creative Music
~
.
:
,_
with everyone dancing and clapping to the
c
adhere to_the Rastafana_n rehg1on ..
·
.
natural_ly when curley hair 1s not combed.
_
Stud_10. Listen to WMCR for further
,
,
·
ieggae beat.
·
The first Rastafanans appeared in
Most of the members of Black Sheep are details.
0
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-
~
-
-
·
:
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.
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..
A View
Fro1n Abroad
Spanish, Spanish, Spanish
ventured beyond the hundred square acres
called, "Go fish" and "O!d Maid."
when they must have a desire to speak a
of Marist College to explore the old world.
Although we play these quite frequently,
killometer (think metric!) a minute. They
•
While reading the first two issues of the Madrid, Spain, is my home until June of the average day usually consists of a little are very friendly as well, even those who·
·
Circle, I was
.
stntck by the familiarity of 1982, and thus far, it's been a comfortable
bit more. Classes began the first week of have assigned 15 page term papers (in
by Veronica Shea
complaints about housing, cafeteria food, one>.
.
October after a month's orientation.
Spanish, of course) ..
apathy, etc. It was the first time in a month
·
1 live with a family called Moscoso, in a
Fortunately all the other students are
I suppose it's all
_
part of the challenge
and a half that I could understand an entire typical apartment building of a middle
American, although everybody's at a dif-
and maybe by the time the papers are due,
newspaper article!
·
class neighborhood. Each morning I am
ferent comprehension level. When. a pro-
Spanish will be second nature to me. Then
·
Perhaps this should be no small wonder greeted with a healthy "Buenos Dias"
fessor tells a joke, half' the class laughs
again I could be dreaming the impossible
for a junior communications major to re• from the Senor, Senora and my new sisters,
while the other half just shrugs and looks
dream
.
In any case, I'm learning and fin-
.
joice
_
over. Not, however, when the said ages 13, 8 and 7. The younger two have a
around the room.
ding that I can actually live in another
junior is surrounded by Spanish,.Spanish, particular liking for card games and we
Truthfully, the professors have been very
culture.
Spanish'
keep each other busy with "Pesca" and
patient with our lack of comprehension.
I
·also
have a single room, hot home•
·
Yes
j
was one of the brave souls who "Softerona" which once upon a time were
They speak very slowly anc!
.
distinc!IY,.
_
cooke<Jfoo~_a_n_d a ~~~it1g,farnily .
.
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' J
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- - Page 4 •
THE
-
CIRCLE•
October
29, 1911
·
.
.
..
.
t
......
-
.
.
Students of independent coilcges
.
who
.
The focus ofthe ISC is primarii{in the
have been feeling the pressure of climbing
·
state legislative
.
,
system that affects
_
in~
educational costs will be glad tci learn that dependent educational aid. This organiza-
they have
·
friends both in Albany
·
and
·
tion was responsible for the increases in the
,
Washington
.
.
·
Tuition Assistance
.
Program (TAP)
These friends
-
are the members of the In-
·
awards
;
implcmented in
.
1978, and for the
dependent Student Coalition (ISC), a
,
placement of students
on
the Board of the
·
statewide nonprofit organization repr
'
esen-
Higher Education
. ·
Services
·
Corporation
ting the interests of more than 300,000 (HESC) which administers TAP. Students
students enrolled in Ne'?' York's indepen-
involved in the Coalition lobbied to
.
bring
dent colleges and universities. The ISC,
about a 16.2 million increase in TAP
form~d in 1977, cites the two major goals benefits, signed
'
into law by Governor
of the organization as the provision of Hugh Carey last July. This Jaw increases
educational opportunities
.
based on the individual awards, as well as family income
·
ability
to
learn, rather than the ability to eligibility aild the maximum family in-
pay, as well as providing students
·
the op~
.
come.
.
.
.
,
-
,
:
.
portunity to participate in the decision-
·
.
While this increase compl~tely cov~rs the
·
making process concerning education and
tui
t
ion increases in public education, it
the welfare of the school.
.
·
•
· ·
·
does not adequately cover the cost jump in
The ISC was formed to
,
articulate the
. _
the pi:ivate sector. This fact; in addition to
special needs of the student in the indepen-
drastic cuts in federal loans and grants, has
dent institution of higher education. Col-
increased the need for a state-oriented push
lege tuition increases annually at a rate of for increased financial aid. Federal monies
almost ten percent a year, averaging out to . now used for independent educatiofr are
a jump in cost of about $600 last year in now
·
threatened by plans to shift these
New York's private colleges and univer-
funds for public use.
·
·
sities
.
Without corresponding increases in
The ISC is also involved in lobbies to in-
federal and state aid
,
many students may crease federal as well as state aid
.
'
be unable to meet these annual increases
.-
Marist gets $50,000 grant to
st
_
udy
cor~
Marist
,
College was awarded a $50,000
National Endowment for the Humanities
(NEH)
·
Pilot Program grant to field-test a
series of new core course
s.
The grant
will
fund planning, study materials and evalua-
tion consultants.
.
liberal education,
..
_
which has been sup:
ported through the Title III and Quill
grants, according
,.
to facuity
,
member
·
Richard LaPietra
,
one of the grant
authors
.
'
·
·
All
c
ourses will prepare students to see
Along with Dr. LaPietra, the grant was
how modes of understanding or con-
authored by a committee
.
comprised of
:
sciou
s
ness
,
rather than particular subject
Xavier Ryan,
,
John Werenko; Phii Chase,
matter, are the essence of liberal education.
Bob Lewis and Rhys Williams
...
:.
"
" '.
.
.
Students will be shown how
.
the modes in
-
.
·
"The grant was the maximum amount
terplay
in
the study of particular subjects,
.
available
-
under the
.
NEH's Pilot Grant
thereby relating those subjects to each
Program and is a strong endorsement of
·
other.
.
•
. ·
.
t}:te strength of the proposal ,because of the
The awarding
·
of this grant
,
is a strong liinited
·
·
<
funds
.:-·
available," · said
_
'.
Judy
_
·
,
sign ofMarist's continuing
,
commitment to Sarnoff, director of rants;
'
'
.
:
.
.
:....·
·
·
.
',. :
·,·-.·
·.· ·
..
·
,
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:
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.
·
·
Qua1itySandwieh
-
MeatS
·•
•
.
At
Most
·
Reasonahle
.--
PriceB
-
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/
Salads •
·
soft
Drinks • Ice Cream
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Open
Nightly
·
7: 30
p.
-
m.
~
;
~
_
l
·.·
a~~-
See
us for your floor partie~
Special·Piatters Available
\
:
IESTAlJUMT B01JlS:
11 AM
'till lli:30 PM
.
.
.
.
Bt .
.
9 • Hyde
Park
:
.
229-7969
I
· Reme~bel'vour
;
$3.9Q
.
c9yer
chargeal:w-ays
i!'c:ludea
'
l:fre.edrir:ik.
·•
·
:z:j:: ..
!l!.-~ ...
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for
·
Sul'Vivcll
THE
EIMCUREAN
'
Cl.UB
i
is
-
accepting
:•
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.
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~
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tearn
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{Ext 139)
or
write
.
i
Fr. ~M~rte
by
:~
•.
.
F
ri~ay,
,
30th
:
Octobe
·
r.
·,
Space
:
·
is
.
limited
There
·
will be five sessions
held
·
on
-
·
-
~
Wednesdays
at
7:30
-
-
p.m.
.
.
/
}
.
'
Cristopher;
.
At least t~is year
.
we won't be«stranger~"
at Gregones _Halloween house party! Not
even the
·
ghosts of Marist could drive me
.
away; I love you!
•
.
•.
·
.
. •
·
Diana
Parley, Jeff &Jim;
·
,
. Your
·
_case of shaving cream has arrived ..
Please pick it up in the post office.
·
·
··
,
.·
..
S&D
(
.
.. RA's lead (or 8th consecutive week!!)
MMMnoeT;
.
You have your own special way of holding
qiy hand, Dont' ever let go.
·
·:
You have your own special way of turning
.
the world so it's facing the wayl'm going,
.
Don't ~ve
·
r leave me.
·
Eddie (Blue eyes)
This may not be Cortland, but lets pretend!
Making Magic
·
Dear Rob;
How about Sanctuary Tonight?
.
Adrienne. & Mikey,
Happy 1st.
J&D
Long live the cat house!
·
,
_
We love you Gary, Phil and Ahab.
Who likes sex?·
Smile
if
you do and we'll GET to you!!!!!!
Suzy D. (Betty
_
Buckley)
.
·
Hoping your star never' loses it gleam and
that you . always keep· the spirit of
"redrum"-and that you'll always "get your
fruit cup."
Leslie
To the cutest bunny rabbit in Gregory;
I'll
hang in there, because I can see the sun
on the horizon.
. Wave Watcher
Trixie, Nadine, Bunny & Sophie,
Go for the
M.T.!!!!!
Love, Claudette and Bubbles
Patty,
.
.
.
I hear your party was so good t,hat your
stomach jumped for joy!!!!
·
Cleanirig Crew
Tomy fellow''whacks";
.
.
There
'
s been a lot of blackouts on our floor
lately~ hasn't there? We need three shots to
burn theM.M.!
.
the third whack
R.O .
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - ' - - -
John
K.,
.
Karyn,
.
·
Was that you doing the bump to "Rosalita
No
·
hickeys yet, but the semester isn't over
.
last Friday night in Skinners?
yet.
Anonymous
.
·
Barb,
What color is it? Brown or Red.
Bonus Baby,
.
The difference between this Halloween and
last Halloween is that last Halloween night
you wore you~ pajamas.
·
Halliday
Bob Butterfield;
When's maintenan
_
ce installing the i-evolv-
.
ing door on your room?
.
DI;
The Question: Always?
The Answer: Yours
Greg
C.H.B.
Oscar:
I'll
see you up on the hill!· ·
Your roommate
0
;
.
Watch out for those CIA guys!
J.
Perchie:
.
We know you needed a ride home, but a
police car is getting a little ridiculous! You
convict!
themoonies
C.M.
You got away with it this weekend; but
you're there for last call next Friday!
·
Love, Seven
Amy (sex goddess
in Paris),
··
Mary,
We're really
·
missing the best horror show Let's have a family conference with
iny
.
To All The Marist Girls,
Excuse me, can you
·
tell me why you're so
good looking?
ToO.C.:
You wild woman! You'll get that nomina-
tion yet.
JimMuzz
_
_
Anonymous
Balding Girls,
.
Make your classes much? Heard they miss
you in the 8:30.
Amused
To the best member of MCCTA,
Thanks so much; Dawn. Keep up the good
work.
A
,
J.S.R.,
Do you think the cat will ever come back'?
Marvin Sims,
•
We'.re still waiting for our roses!
Donald&T
;
H.,
Happy Halloween: Are there pumpkins
and ghosts friendly like ours? Hope you
had lots of treats.
Your favorite roomies
Mary Vail:
If
you can get out of the pubs over there for
a minute, we wanted to say we all love and
miss you, and we
'
re taking good care of
Maria. Write soon.
Ali-Bear:
Come out and be wild like the old days-
your bar stool is waiting .
K2,D,CandJ
2
Re-Re:
Don't Jet the Indians get to you-you won!
M~
After hours party in the
white
Pacer this
weekend .
ToMac&Mc:
I'll
see you both in "Owego
.
., We'll turn
the town upside down.
/
·
Kate
don't be left in the dark! Come to the last
session of the lighting workshop tonight at
in the theatre. Sponsored by MCCTA
.
Any Student who has not signed over their
·
financial aid checks for Fall
1981
semester
,
please stop in the Business Office to do
so
immediately.
·
j
H·appy Halloween
from the Circle Staff
.
,
'
Witt;iout youru<kgirl:
.
·
.
. ),
>
.
.
.
.
.
•
.
moth
.
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·
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I
THE
CHANCE
.
CLUB
-
,
RESTAURANT
.
CRANNEL
si:
POUGHKEEPSIE
473-7'1'16
I
Cha,..+euse
.
··
AL
ICE.:
:
,·
_
WHITFIEL.D
,.,._ ori9;nal
lcllilcly
cad
oJ
·
''..MCQuES SREL ... "
.
'Piui
n,i,;,i,;, ·
~•c/i,ii,ei
BILL
WHEELER
2
·
.
.
•
·
.
We.
ha.ve
··
-:
'
no
li"e
:'
rst
Ared :~_
,
_:
~ranee..··
~
·
entertainment
on
Mon
:
d~y
•·
.
··
ni9h+s this
·
..
.month.
·
,
·
··.
®a&,~!
C.l-\P
•
We.
are
.
ope~,
.
·
howe"e,;
a
_
nd cordio.11
ien-6ift .
i£ls l>rial:
s,u;.1
invite
you
1
BU.DWEISER
join us fo
,MICHELOB
~
dinner
a.
drinks
110 <:ovE~
on
o.
M
_
onddy
_
-
LOw,
t.ow
P~tc.es
LOlS
OF
S:~E
Gt
~5
r
ony
other
·
9,--
n,,..
e"enlfl.9·
SOMETIIING-
L
·
uNCM HOURS:
fALL'(
8\G
MON-SAT fl:30·5
15
~trTATNfLV SClltDULED
DIN~ER tfOU~S:
fillt
1"0lflfiMT81T llMSM'T
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f\lM ll
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su~-llluRs -
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FRI• SAT -
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1111 Sl&i,I UP
fOR
ill
E- Ct+A
tlCE'
S
MAIWI<, UST.
ST
Lll)E
NT
S:
~0\/EMBER
IZTH
IS
PLENTY OF SECURE,
WELL-LIT PARKlNG
o
o
•
OUR
FAC\
L l
Tl ES MA'<
BE RESERVED
FOR
LUNCHEONS,
BANQUETS, PARTIES AND SPEC(AL OCCASIONSo
-
-
-
C..l-tP
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SAvE
(\
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- P a g e
6_:
THE CIRCLE_~ October
29,,
19B1
.·
,..
.
.,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-·
.
.
'
.···;·
' ' .
. .
.....
.
,·_..
.
,
_
·,.·
..
·
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
~·
.
-
~
_..,._
.
,
. .
· · ON.SALE NOW! .·
·•
·
· .·
.
SEE MARKETING CLUB REPRESENTATIVES
·
·
·
'FOR DETAILS· -
Dorm phptos l:o be ta"'~
Nov;;
2nd
&.
3rd . · · .. ··.··•··
.
·~-
.
.
.
.
· SENIORS:
· __
- • · ·
.
-
..
.
.
.
· .. · ·
·
·
.
-
·
.
.
-
.
····-'
.
.
~
.
.
.
:
.
·
...
,.,:,
-
'
,.
. . .
-;
..
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
, ... -···:)-/·?:_ .. ;-:-··.,:__, , ,
_
-Last day
for senior portr-its is-Oct~ber
29th!
·
- - . - - -
. -Help
us·:
iri
:dedicating
the
yearbOOk.
Send
your
.
/ -
_
sug"gestion_ :
to-
_
-
box
:
C843-
or· stop ·
by
-,•-
th,
~
:: -._ . _ -_
- ~eynard
o,ice~
·
,
-
.
.
Park
Di.~.~ou~~
Bev!r~ges
·
.
_·
'·
·.··. ALI
fkirist:& ···.-·· ........
.
.. ·
·-
- Albany
Post Road
-
.
- -
•· · --
.
-·
- __ -
.
.
_
· · _ · · ·
_
-
·_. -··-
.
.
.
.........
·
.
·
.
.
.
Hyd~Park .
.
.. ·..
j .·•
Garden Center •· .
'
.
.
.
-
I_.
,
_
. _
·
.
.
·
Sp~c·_1als.Thi_sW~ek
·
-
--
i . •·•
r
·
.. .
MOLSON
. $2.79 • 6 pack
'
.
192,
Washington
St: . _
I
·
.
·
. .•
PABST
·.
$6.49 ·
Case
.
.
Poughkeepsie, N.
Y. 12601
·
I
.
BLATZ ( cans)
.
$1.49 -
6 pack
.
914-471-5 700
:
· COKE
.
$1.09 - 2
liters -
t
.
.
.
I
.
r
I
'
I
'
..
'
' ,·
,
..
•
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10% Discount with Student ID
..
,
.
.
.
.
'
t
- - - ~ - ~ - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - ~ ~ - - -..... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - October
29, 1981·
THE CIRCLE·
Page 7 - -
The
Inquiring
Photographer
· Dave Jaco, senior:
I really didn't know
about him. My brother does, though, so
I
guess
I
probably would.
I'll
wait up for
him this year and see.
·
Artie
Quintana, junior: I believe in the
Great Pumpkinbecaustfhe is an element
of
modern day fantasy.
Do you believe in the Great Pumpkin?
Justine McGrory, freshman: The great
pumpkin! Yeah, I'll be out there waiting
for him on Halloween night.
Donna Mazzola, junior: Of cotise,
I do. -
Who else is going to bring me goodies on
Halloween?-
Jane Rosenthal, sophomore: I do. When
I was little he made a house call.
NUNZIO'S ,PIZZA
~~;530
MAIN.'STR·EET
.
.
;· OPEN:
11:30 am~3:00 am
Weekdays
.
.
.
-·-
-
.
-
11:30-a.m.-4:.00a.m.
Weekends
Fast
11-elivery--
SPECIAL-OF-THE-MONTH
$3.75 Pies
.
'
471-0223
Marist Institu~e readies
4th
annual poll
For the fourth consecutive year, Marist
College students
will
be . conducting a
· survey of Dutchess County voters as they
emerge from the voting booths on Election
Day, Nov. 3. ·
.. The poll predicts the outcomes of major
races. Each year, the poll has accurately
predicted the results• in all of. the races
studied.
- Lee M. Miringoff, assistant professor of
Political Science and director of the Marist
Institute for Public Opinion, said: '"the
poll is being conducted to aid student
understanding of the political process."
A total of 160 students will be involved
in the Polling Project, and Miringoff said
.
.
J.
.
'
.
that voters in each of the County's 191 elec-
tion districts
will
be interviewed "at some
point during.the day. We're trying to find
out the reasons behind the choices voters
make and to understand the mood of the
electorate."
·
Results of the poll are not made public
before voting ends. • Miringoff and the
students will be commenting on the results
on
WKIP radio in Poughkeepsie, beginn-
ing at
9
p.m. election night.
Professors Jake Maness, Louis Zuc-
carello, Carolyn Landau and Gus Nolan
provided students from
classes as
volunteers.
-
.
I.
(SUPER NEW YORK CUTS)
Is NOW located
,
at-
A9
Academy Street
(Near
"Good
Times Cafe"
.
Ampl•
Customer
Parking
Hl1
and.Her
BODY PERM
SHAMPOO, CUT
AND BLOW DRY
.... $35.00
'
18'
0
OPEN ..
G SPECIAL
From
s500
Open
Dally
10-8·
No Appointment Nec•••ary
For
Appointment, call
_.5'-99M ·
·
Commuters: Save 20%
·
Check out meal
•ticket .plan-good in
:
·
Dining Hall Only
Commuters
&
Residents:
Save 10%
Gheck
out
coupon
booklet.· Good
in
Coffee Shop, Deli
and.Dining Hall
Purchase of booklets
may be made in
Food Service Off ice
_ _
Page_
_
B
~
-
THE
.
CIRCLE~ October29,
,
1981..-
_
_
. . . : . - - . - - . - ~ ~ ~ ~ - - : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ; ;
B-Guido ~s Corner
by Tony Cardon~.
·
Marvin
Sims, Joe
Ver-.
rim and Kevin Bal!cock
·
·
.
.
.
.
-Anthony "Moose"
-
·
T_imberlake has
been making news a lot lately. His latest
.
escapade was a
.
real winner; Moos
_
e h
_
ad a
brick thrown to his window at about 2 a.m.
·
.
by someone .
.
Moose's reply to the inc~de~•
·
was;
"Even when I sleep I make B-Gutdo
~
Corner."
.
"My roommates, Steve and Gil, know
·
why someone threw
.
the brick. I still don't
think it had something
le>
do with my out-
side shooting."
.
.
· _
.
·
-Newsflash:
Return of the Fox Day
1s
·
Nov. 2 at the home Volleyball game. Free
T-shirts to all who attend. Who is that
masked fox? Some say it's our number one
fans, Dick Quinn or
.
Jay Williams (S.I.D;)-
.
We seem to feel it's a top
_
school official
whose last name rhy~es with hurry.
Some suggestions for
Halloween costumes
-Betty Yeaglin as the FDA;s stamp of ap-
proval
·
·
.
.
.
-Barbara McMahon as Nadia Comenice
-Carla
Morrelo as Tatoo
-James
Humpf as Barney Rubble
.
-Mike Weise as Ronald Reagan
-Liz Healy, Eileen Dearie, and Linda
Gallagher, all as Dolly Parton
·
_
.
-Bob Kaminsky as Hong Kong Phoey
-Mark
Miller as the Michelin Mai:i
-Willie Clare ~s The Elepha~t Man
.·
-Elsie Anguilla as Matre D
.
. of Coppola~s
-Dickie
Keelan as Raymond Burr!! Hap-
py Halloween
Boos of the week
-Chris Tuite as Bo Derek
-BOO to George Ducey
.
for drinking
-TomLasalaasaT.V.repairman
other people's 'drinks and not buying his
-Th_e girls crew team as Nuns
own. Boo!
:
.
:
.
· ·· •.
·
·
·
•
.
.
-Gail Donoghue as Perry Mason
-Boo to Ivan Navas for letting the Sev's
-John Griffen as Johnny Carson
·
pizza man go up to the 7th floOJ:
and
tell t_he
·
·
-ZAP as Josie and the Pussy Cats
person his
.
pizza is down ~t
_
the secunty
·
-Star as
Star
.
desk. BOO!
.
<
.
.
•
·
·
.
.
.
.
-Nicolette
Filannino as Pat Benetar
.
·
~
The biggest. BOO
to
Farmer Vincent for
.
\VMC:R
Playlist
TOP ALBUM PICKS ~OR THE WEEK
1.
THE ROLLING STONES (Tattoo
You)- Start Me Up
.
·
·
.
2. GENESIS (Abacab)- No Reply At ~II
·
3. Hall~nsOATES (Private Eyes)- Private
Eyes
4. THE KINKS (Give The People What
IO
•.
DEBBIE H~RRY (KooKoo)-
Backfired
·
.
·
·
.
· ·
.
:
.
l l. SANTANA (ZeBop)- W1_nnmg
.
12. VAN HALEN. (Fair Warnmg)-- So this
is Love
·
·
·
Station Radiofile
They Want)- Destroyer
.
-
T" k t
Es
(L
D t Ce
.
•Stay
.
Tuned
_
For Numerous
ic e
5.
THE MOODY
.
BLU
ong 1s an
.
Voyager)-TheVoice
Giveaways
·
·
·
•
.
1
6. GO, GO's (Beauty And The Beat)- Our •Live broadcasts from the
.
Pub
·
(Bil
Lips Are Sealed
·
-
Palmeri, Doug Haight, Ed Powers)
•·
7. TOM PETTY
&
HEARTBREAKERS •Live Red Fox football vs. Pace w/Barry
(Hard Promises)-A Women in Love
·
Lewis & John Petachi
·
.
8. ALLMAN BROS. BAND (Brothers of •For dedications and requests call now at
the Road- Straight from the heart
.
ext.
132.
Your radio station ... where the
9. DEYO (New Traditionalis,ts)- Through Red Fox Rox!!!!!
·
Being Cool
·
-Rich Schatzel as Gum by
.
.
.
.
I
.
using preservafrves in his
:
meats. BOO
)
,'
. .
.
,
'
.
1f
~\\;ii~~;f
f
ttdon
.
B~:~.,
h~~-.:::;,o:,,,
&n.
i~i?
:,
,
111111111
.
I
., ,
:, .
11111111111
fr/
~~
~
-
. =:
1
.
-Lirid_aPanarnas
J~cq~es_Cousteau
·
.
·
akcihol;
.·
Miu:ist
_
·
wiil be
.
·
.
h
.
oldirig
:
alcoh~I
...
·
.
.
. ~
-
-
.
·
_
.
:·_·:_
As
E N
'
_
.
z
.
-
A
·.
-
, s
.
·
:
·
·
:
·
·
_·.
_
.
'
·
'
/
-John, KurtZ)~S
_
Uncle
.
Joe
_
of Pettycoat
.
awareness
.
meetings from
-
NOV
i
2
·
to
4
.
m
·,
.
.
}
·
Junction
·
:
.
··
.-
·
.
,
. ·
·
:
-
·
Fireside "Lounge.
·
Please attend;
.
the B-
-'
•
.
.
.
-Billy Gillespie as Barney Fife
.
.
·
.
Guido's staff. will be there.
·
.
,
·
•
~Torri
Shann<>n
..
as ;Arnold, the Flints
.
·
·
.
Seiler's
.
claim to quality meats is a result
.. _.
stone's paper:boy
.
..
:
...
;
. .
..
.
.
.
.
.
of
.
from
.
using Farmers.
,
Yincent's
..
famoµs
;
'
.
,.·
-Debbie Kessletr!ark
:
as
'.a
sttck
,:
choice cuts.
·
,:-
·
·
·
·
:
<
.
.
.
.
.
. ·
.
·. ·
.
..
.
.
dynamite (Boomt
_.::.
·
.
,,
.
···. ,.:
.
·
•
·
·
·
:.
Hockey (aris;
•
see Marist in
.
their
-
h
_
ome
-MikeDoher'ty
as O_r~on Wells
opener Moriday Nov. 2nd. B-Guido's will
-Ray Valdes as
.
a Bncklay~r
be there scouting the crowd for feature
.J:C.
Gorman.?s a Flash Cube.
.
stories.
:
.
.
-Cindy Hesk~th and Lynn
.
Canmng as
.
Happy
.
Birthday, Fran. Love,
·
Tony,
Laverne and Sh_1rley
.
.
Marvin, Guido
arid
Kevin.
·
.
.
·
-John Petaccqts Pugsly
.
One of-the most feared R.A
;
's on cam-
-John Bel~~in
_
?.
~s Devo
.
pus, Debbie Valentine, p_oses above
in
h~r
-Joe Verni!• a
f
11my Durante
stunning Rockette outfit at last year
s
-Joe
Grassi as
__
G.I. Joe
.
.
.
Halloween mixer!
..
-Kevin Babcock as Dudly Do-r:1ght
We hope all of you
.
attend
-
.
this Satu~·
-Soup C:llmp
,
b~II ~tay home
·
da"y's mixer'. Terri SuHivart ~nd
.
Mag~~e
..
-Pam
·
¥cGregor as Jesse James
. Browne
,,,m
be there,- appearmg a
_
s Lois
.
-Barry Ja111ison
_
iis
:
~eedt,emeyer
·
;
Lahe
•
and Jimmy Olson. They said;
'
.
'W~'H
,
-Sherly\
·
and
.
P~mse
:
a~
:
Lenny anq
.
bothlfo
-
looking for that"SUPER" n111~,"
Squiggy
··
-
,
.
>
.
;
l
.
.
·
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GROCERIES-BEER
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BOLOGNA
.·
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AIASKAN KING CRAB
SUBWAY S~CIAL
SHRIMP
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•
TUNA
·.
SPICY ITAUAN
·
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ITAUAN
EXPRESS
ROAST BEEF
,s.,~
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,1>ou,;
HAM
·,
.
.
:
SAUSAGE
nJRKEY BREAST
MEAlBALLS
PASTRAMI
·
CHEESE
PEPPERONI
VEGETARIAN
GENOA SAL\MI
SALAD Pl.ATE
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•BIM•~•
.
Su•""""-.fO,
We've got more
taste.
PARK DISCOUNT PLAZA. HYDE PARK
(Next to Carvel
.
.
· .·
·
: ·
OPEN LATE
·
·,;:
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·:
·.
~--
-
.
·
. . . .
··
·
.
Op8J17
·
pay5
·
a
Week
6
a~rn: -
9
p.m.
452-4772
I
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11
'·
W:[ugShots
·
.
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.:
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Aboveis.the-B-Guido·staff's-"Happy
.
.
.
.
.
:
.·
.
Halloween'
':.
,
picture~
·
featuring, fr:om
. ·
.
:
.
·
1eft to right Kevin Babcock, Joe Verrilli,
·
·
.
Tony Cardone, and Marvin Sims. When
· .
.
: askedJf the}ihelieved in the Great
Pum-
-
·
pkin, they replied "Don't talk about our
.
:
leader Bil Remick that way!•~
.
.
,
:
•
•
-
.
.
A
strange phenomenon (above right)
..
_
.
was seen descending the stairs of House
IV
in Champagnat last Saturday· night
at 4 a.m. Nodues have been found, but
some report that it ·was seen in the·
.
.
Renaissance sitting on a bar stool that
·
·
same night. Could
.
it be the notorious
"Champagnat ghost?"
.
At right are students casting their
ballots for the Top
-
Ten Bodies on cam-
pus,
sp°iored
by
the B-Gu!do staff.
Photographs
by
Terri Sullivan
·
and Maggie Browne .
,
·:
,
~
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:
- - Page
10
~
THE CIRCLE·
_
October 29, 1N1
_
_ ,;_.;__~--~~-.;....
.... _~:::::::_::::::::::::~:;:::,:::~::::::::;~~
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Seiler~s
g(JeS
Aim.enian
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on Armcmian
food,
·
served in the
-
elegant-'
<:
:
::
:·
·
_
·
ambience of the Marist Cafeteria. This din.:
:
:
~
·. ·
,
-:
...
ing spot is
.
one
.
not to be missed,
·
and cer.;.
..
.
.
..
.
.
_
tainly not to be forgotten.
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
,
.
,
·
•
.
We
..
were seated only
-·
twenty minutes
after arrival, due to the facuhat thi~ dining
.
.
spot requires
.
l.D. numbers to be
-
allowed
. ·
.
entrance. We had to serve ourselves,
··
and
after finding a tray and a clean plate, we
moved on to the feast.
Salad was available, as well as rolls and a
few vegetable choices to accompany the
meal. This Armenian meal consisted of
lamb, beef, and seafood choices served
shishkebob style. After figuring out what
these little objects on sticks were, we served
ourselves.
.
·.
The
·
beverage choice was wide;
:
and
deserving of the meal. As no
·.
Armenian
drinks were available, we chose between a
range of brands at the soda machine, as
.
well as a selection of fruit juices to comple-
·
·
ment the meal.
·
·
For some reason, no one seemed to have
much appetite for dessert. We brought our
trays to a small window where unidentified
hands reached out and grabbed them. One
fellow diner was scolded for leaving silver-
ware on the
:
iray. You just can't take some
.
·
people anywhere.
·
·
w~-·-·
NDV.
·
19-tB
:
-
,
.
·
·
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·
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ri~t':whenthe•
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Jlil~l
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America1i
·
Caricer
. -
-
-
•:
.
.
..
I
;~k!t;~~~&t
.
::t!\~ll!II
-
to give
up
cigarettes
.-
.
·
=:~
~\!ll~ltll~~
for
a
day. Give it
·a
. · ·
•••• -:-:•=:•·==·=·=·=·
try
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ht f d
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ou m1~t
f
1n
,,
.
·=========
:l=~=~===:::::
you
can qui orever.
:t'
II
.
THE GREAT AME~ICAN"
.::::?\:.
=::::::::::::):::]
.
SMOKEOUT
.
.
. ··:'!:~~~~)~
'<q
American Cane~
Society
i
.
·
····:·:
·
:·::~:;:;
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.
.
.
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:~~;t:n~1t.e}~~1fg~~~~
-
_·:
_
This
space
·
contri~uted
by
the
publisher.
_
is fluorescent, the voices are loud, and
_if
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ . . . ; - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - ~ - - - - ~ - " ' . " " " - - - - ~ - ,
you're really lucky; you'll get to see so
0
meone slip on a salad leaf or drop a tray.
This
entertainment is always applauded by
the restaurant patrons.
_
·.
-
·
All in all, it was a memorable
.
dinner,
although some felt that theArmenian food
should have stayed in Armenia. Many of
our
·
fellow patrons decided
·
ro skip the
_
meal, and chose
to
visit McDonald's They
just
don't know what they missed.
.
.
·
.
Noah's
Ark
.
A number of times we have .ventured
to
.
:
Noan;s Ark for a few drinks'and some off-
ca~P~
.
s
·.
socia\izi11g .
.
·
l-l9wever,
.·
Howevef,
•
·
·li~js~
1ij~;1~
~
~ili~llt~~ll~~l~:t~~~l;~~~;;t
f
~
-
.
.
For those of you who have never been to
.
Noah's Ark it's loca
_
ted on Delafield; right.
around the corner
.
fromProvenzano's, The
atmosphere is
:
friendly
~
and that combined
:
with an antique
·i
decor
tha(
produces
:
a
.
warm
comfortable
.
Jeeling
.
one
.
usually
.
doesn'fgefat a bar,
'._
:
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Down
:
tQ
.
tti
·
e
':
juicy'
'
stuff!
:
The food is
_
outstancting;
·,
W~
~
started off our dinner:
.
with Fren'ch
Onion
~oup, which
t~.
by
.far
..
_
.
.
the best _!E
.
eoughkeep:Sie
.'
}Yj!
_
then pz:oceed-
· ·
'.
ed
tocpnquer-a'llfotiiftafo of greens topped
.
l
~
:
,
_
.
.
_..
. . ·
wiih
a
creamy lake of blue cheese dressing
.
.
.
Delight~d
,
with the
·
meal so far, we waited
·
.
::'>··
L
.
·
:"
·,
·
·.•
.
·
-
:
.
••
:·
•
·
with
.
ariti
.
cipa'tion
.
for
..
the
:
,
main
•.
course
:.
.
:
.-
'.
_
:
;
·
when the
,
food caiJie;
we
·
~~rt(not
:
disap,
•·
'
•
··
· .
pointed to say the least. I had a mushroom
·.
_
,
.
,
: /
quiche that
:,.V
_
as
s'o
_
ou~
·
o( this
,
world
/
and
.
·
·
•
·
,.
····
Sheryl's
·
plate was
·
overflowi:ng wiih the
:;
. . ..
•
.
.
most delicious ham
;
crepes s~e•s ever
_
tasted
:
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
The foodwas
·
hot and plentiful. Needless.to
·
·
say/we_ enjoyed the meal
·
tremendously.
-
These are only a few, of the en trees that-one
can choose't'rom
.
:·
.
.
-
.
·.
.
...
..
.
)·he atmosphere
:wa
.
s warm, the price~ are
·
'.,
.:.
:
.
very
'
inexpensive, and the food is
,
'terriuc:
·h
:
.
,
.
Noa~•s
.
isagreat place,
·
not only for dinner,
.
1p
.
.
but
·
they also have
·
a
.
terrific lunch
.
·
menti
:
..
L
.
-·
Noah's Ark
:
rates
·
a IOin our book
;
<
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,
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,Sb~ryl
~-~~for!l
.
ani
C
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· ·
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DeniwDeVincerilis
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.
.
.
·
·
·
-
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.
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~
·.
:
_
Whe~ you are
-
in the mood
-
for a
g~o~
.
·
meatbut
Y<>U
don't have a fortune
.
to
spend
.
and
.
don't want a
·
hamburger, Joseph's;
-
located on Delafield Street iri Poughkeep~
sie, is the plac~ for you.
.
.
.
.
.
;
:
.
'.
:,.
.
,
,
. ·
'-~:
This
.
little,
.
quaint
-
:
Italian
:
·
·
restau
'
rant
-:
greets
.
you
'with
a
tray
.
'
of cheese
;
arici
~
·
·
crackers on the house followed by
.
a rrienu
consisting
·
or a variety of dl1hes
·
ranging
·
from full course
.
meals to incredibly inex-
·
pensive a la carte dishes, ranging from
'
Italian
-
prepared seafood and pasta dishes
served generously and promptly. The wine
choice is excellent, and makes a tasteful ac-
companiment to each m·eal. The selection
of desserts, if you have room for any, mat-
ches the delicious quality of the meal.
.
The atmosphere of Joseph's is quiet and
·
-
relaxing. It's an affordable escape from the
hustle and pressures of school. Joseph's is
a college
·
student's paradise, in price, at-
mosphere and food choice
.
·
-Susan Vassallo
. · .
·.
:
·
.·
~
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..
.
·
·
-
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.
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.
.
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GetontlteM~tlain
-
-
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.....,,.....,... _ _
.... ,... ....... _ .... _ October 29, 1981
·
·
T~ECIRCLE·
Page 1 1 - - -
.
··
SOcCer
squadboQ:§i~
'
:fegpra<Up to
.
·
10-4-2
·
·
·
,
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
beJeats{Stt
'
Jbh~
·
's a~d
Seton
Hall
by Paul Palmer
·
Fri~ay
·
night'.s game imder the
,
lights in
.
.
•
.
.
.
-
.
,
·
New Jersey against Seton Hall was a totally ·
. The Marist Colleg~ soccer tea~ notched -different story.
L~st year some sai~ •~al the
two more victories last week to up their
.
wm, 9-0 for Martst, ~as a combmt1on of
record to
·
10-4-2: The first victim was St. good playing and luck but after this year's
·
Johns University and the second victim was game I think the )uck can
.
be exclud~d -
Seton Hall.
·
.
Marist won this year 8-0. Marist only took
•
In
·
the St. Johns game the
·
two teams 13 shots in the game ":~ich was played
played to
a
scoreless first half before
Bil1
·
under sloppy, soggy cond1ttons.
Cooper got things ro11ing Marist's way
with an assist frnm brother Bob. And again
. ·
The scoring parade began once again
it was Marist, this time from transfer Ian
.
with
Bill
Cooper the assist to Yyvind
Arscott. Arscott's goal was unassisted and Larssen. Then.it was Jan Arscott on his se-
gave Marist all
-
the goals they needed as cond goal in
.
two gaines again this time
they.hung on for the 2-1 victory.
unassisted
.
Marist's third goal came on a
patented Oyvind Larssen penalty kick. ing this season, they are Oct. 28 vs. Pace at
Bobby Cooper supplied Marist with it's
'\
home at
3:00 p.m.; Oct. 31 at Adelphi at
fourth goal on an
·
assist from Ian Arscott
.
2
:
00 p.m.~ Nov. 4 vs. Union at home at
Number five was from
Bill
Cooper and the 2:30 p.m. and finally Nov. 7 at Manha1tan
sixth and final goal of the first hair went to at
I :00 p.m.
·
freshman Vinnie Caruso.
·
The second half saw Marist calm down a
· little and score only two goals, the first of
which went to Caruso
.
unassisted. Marist's
eighth · and final goal was scored by
sophomore PaulSutherland.
The win leaves Marist with a 4-2 record
in the Tri-State Soccer Conference and 10-
4-2 overall
.
The Red Foxes have
.
four games remain-
•...• corner Kicks---··
Goalie Andy Homola now has a 1.00
goals against average after 16 games.
Leading scorers are freshmen Tim
Buchanan and transfer Ian Arscott tied
with 11 pts apiece. Marist has outscored
their opponents by a 36-16 margin.
New York State Soccer Ratings
Team
Division
I
Record
1.1.1.U
.
11-0-2
1 0 )
2.Columbla
3. St
Francis
4.
Cornell
5.
Hartwick
6.
Colgate
·
7.
Marlst
8.
Fordham
·
9.
Syracuse
10
.
C,C.NX
NAfy1E
TP
Ian Arscott
11
Tim Buchanan
11
Bill
Cooper
.
10
Oyvind Larssen
10
Ed
Isaacson
10
John Goff
.
9
Bob Cooper
8
ToreUdahl
7
·
Vincent Caruso
5
7-0-1
9-2
5.3.1
1·2·3
6-3
8-4-2
5-3-1
6-6
6·1-2
Points
Results
100
d. CW Post
4-1,
d, Manhattanville
9-0
.
d, Penn
St.
3-1
90
d.
Yale
2-0
77
d. Fordham
2-1,
d, Adelphi
2-0
70
I.
Brown
1·2
63
d. Syracuse
1-0
34
I.
Army
0-2
33
d. Pratt
5-0, 1, St.
Peters
1-3
30
I.
St.
Francis
1-2, 1,
F.D
.
U.
(T) 2-3
25
I.
Hartwick
0
-
1
21
d. Hunter
3-0,
d
.
Kings
1-0,
d, CW Post
2-1
·
Goalkeeping
Games
Andrew Homola
16
Andy La Rocca
1
Heinz Warmhold
1
Totals
16
Opponents
16
Min.Played
1440
45
15
1500
1500
G.A.
16
0
0
16
36
.
.
~
;
~
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~
·
~
·
+
·~~~~~~~~~~~i~
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-
r
~-
'.
_
"
·
,
-
John Hintze
2
G.A
.
A,Saves
Pc\,
so
W:L-i
1.00
·--
90
. 849
-
.
4
.. ,
.. •
'
'\0-4-2.
•
Paul Sutherland
2
0.00
2
1.000
0
o:o.o
Mike Vardilli
1
Totals
.
93
Opponents
37
0.96
92
.851
4
10-4·2
2.16
115
.762
3
4-10-2
Tim
Buchanon moving the
ball and
Marlst
up in
the
soccer ratings.
.
_
.
. .
,
.
.
.
.
.
..
:
photo
by
Mike
Chung
·
Tennis Teartr
;
eilds season with
,
4~2
mark
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
,
_
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~,
:~:
.
-
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.
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'-
~-.
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:
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./
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.
_,Y Karen Flood
. The absence of key players Nancy Col-
New Rochelle's Nancy McAuliffe 6-0, 6-1.
satisfying" commented Coach Joe Weil
. .
.
.
..
"
'
'
agrossi and Kathy Carmody due to a crew
In first doubles, the tandem of Lisa Ar-
·
after the match.
·
Their tennis season came to
.
an end on race did present somewhat of a challenge
curi and Karen Fl~od (M) tripped Betsy
.,,
:
In singles Sue Miranda
(C)
defeated
Saturday, October 24th in New Rochelle for the Red Foxes, but the line up's new
Green and Denise Byrd (NR) 6-J, 6-2; and
Nancy Colagrossi (M) 6-4
,
6-0; Donna
.
just after Lisa Arcuri swatted an awesome
'
form met that
.
challenge and iced a 4-1 ver-
_
the team
of
Chris Carey and Jane Piecuch
·
Faron
(C)
edged Jeannette Mendy (M)
7
-
5.
·
unreturnable
·
cross-country backhand into diet over the College of New Rochelle .
.
·
.
·
...
'.
(M) were edged by Pory McCurie and Cin-
·
6-4; Kathy Mulligan (M) handled Beckr
.
_
thecorner
.
to
.
duallywinadouhlesmatch
Marist's Jeanette Mendy' covered the
·
-
dyCalone{NR)6-4,6-4.
·
Wilt
(C)
6-1, 6-3; Karen Flood (M) did
·
·
,
with partner Karen Flood
,
The Marist Col-
.
first singles position and defeated
.
Lisa
. : ·
/
away with Linda Acierno
(C)
6-1, 6
-
4;
J~~e Women•~ Tennis Team had recorded
.
Hayes
,
of:_
_
New Roch~lle
.
6-3, 7
7
_6
.
.
..
.
:
E~rlier in the week on Octob_er 21st, the
:
Kathy Carmondy (M) beat Debbie Parrot
1t s fourth wm of the
.
day to assure
·
the Sophomore
·
Karen
_
,.
Flood of
·
Manst
,
Manst women went to battle with Concor-
(C)
6-4, 6-0; and Lisa Arcuri disposed of
·
.
match against the College ofNew Rochelle, dominated New Rochelle's Ann Konefal 6~
·
.
dia on home territory, and fired up a 5-4
Concordia
'
s determined Debbie Malewitz
·
,
and end their season with an overall record
·
3, 6-3; and Marist'
.
s strong and promising
·
.
victory. "Concordia has a strong team with
7-6, 7-6
.
of4-2.
.
freshman, -Kathy Mulligan disposed of
a lot of depth therefore the win was really
In
doubles Sue Miranda and Linda
.
Acierno (C) defeated Nancy Colagrossi and
:
·
.
•
·
·
.
:
HooJ!$t
er~
·
prepar~Ji!r
-
inidal
•
l)ivisf on
·
.
f
c(lmpaign
·
:·
fl~~;:
1
:i~:~~~i:~~ii!1!5~~1~~ft~~;·
·
,.
·
·
·
.
..
·
·-
-
· ·
.
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,
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.. :
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,
:
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':
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.:
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:
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::
_"
:
·
·
ChrisCareyandJanePiecuchcapturedthe
:
·
.
Speclai,tp
_
the Circle
rugged rebounder, and
·
team leader who
also a great scorer. Veterans Rufus Cooper
win for Marist by defeating Debbie Parrot
\
-
should
.
better his marks of 7.5 points and
and Tom Meekins will fight for the point
and Debbie Malewitz of Concordia, 8-5
.
\<
., .
Marist College -basketball
·
coach Ron
·
5.6 rebounds per game
,
that he compiled
guard position, as will talented freshman
Marist's only team losses this year came
+
.
Petro welcomed back seven lettermen and last year while playing despite a painful
Bruce Johnson.
.
at
_
the
-
hands of Siena College and Pace
'
/
-
six top newcomers as basketball practice
..
knee injury. Smith, a 6'5" sharpshooter, is
·
_
The Red Foxes are deep at forward, pac·
University. Siena defeated Marist 5-2, and
'
commenced last Thursday.
Marist's top returning scorer and leading
ed by 6'7" sophomore Steve Eggink, who
Pace surpassed Marist 4-3.
The program has taken a major step for-
candidate for
·
post-season laurels. The
had a fine rookie campaign before a knee
"This season was a learning experience
·
ward,
.
moving intoJhe
·
NCAA Division
J
:
..
·
former ECAC Rookie-of
-
the-Year: poured
·
injury
..
shortened -his season. Three top
.:
,
for both my girls and
·
I," said Coach Joe
'=
ranks after three years in Division II. The in 17.5 points per contest a year ago and
junior college players,'6'5" Daryl Powell,
Weil. "Everybody's game improved and
·
.
Red Foxes
will
participate iii the · newly
should become the Red Foxes' all-time
6'5" Ronnie Ryan, and 6'7" Eric Taylor we were an happy with the end results. As
realigned ECAC MetrO:-South Conference,.
·
scoring leader this season.
are all expected to have an immediate
-
im-
for next year, the dedication and strength
and play a schedule comprised of all Divi-
Marist
will
have plenty of talent at guard
pact on the program, as all are coming off seniors
·
Lisa Arcuri, Kathy Carmody, and
sion I foes.
·
·
besides Smith. Senior Todd Hasler, one of outstanding years with super teams. 6'8"
Nancy Colagrossi have contributed to the
The foundation of the Marist five
will be the East's premier shooters, was the Foxes'
·
freshman Ted Taylor is also ready to make
team will be hard to replace. But
if
all
senior
center
Anthony
"Moose"
·
second leading scorer with 15.4 points per
a contribution forthwith.
.
underclassmen return, we will have a tough
Timberlake, and junior guard Steve Smith. game last season. · Keith Denis, one of
Steadily improving Gil Padilla, a 6'7",
team to beat.
The
6'8"
·
Timberlake is a steady player, Marist's four junior coll_ege transfers, is
205 pound sophomore, will add depth at
center behind Timberlake.
WMCR
brings Red Foxes to the air waves
If you can't make it to the game, listen to
it on WMCR 91.9 FM. As they did last
week, WMCR will be broadcasting the Oc-
tober 31st football game between the Red
Foxes and Pace University. The action Barry Lewis will be handling the play by follows the Fox on campus the WMCR
starts at l :00
with the PRE-GAME play and John Petacchi will be doing the Sports team.
'
SHOW, and then live coverage starts at color commentary for the team thar ·
1 :30 when the whistle begins
to
start play.
-
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----
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..
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_
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-
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p.g.
'£ffi;f
t6h6;d().\\qf
-
llect
-
FOxes
.
at
ho
Ille 56-16
by Bill Travers
-
--
-
·
--
; .
.
;,
- -
,
-~i::~~ we~t-:~~r~ig~{
\
~~kle to paydirt
-
·-
-
-
·
-
-
--
·
-
"
from the three; This plus Huber's conver-
.
What do yoti s~y about a game that you sion brougbithe
,
score to 14-7.
-
;
·
·
'
-
_
_
lose 56-16? What do you say about a gante
·
_-•
-
·
·
Marist's
''
defense stymied; Lowell
_
and·
-
__
when
.
your offense is
-
outgained 457 yards
-
forced a_fumblejust seconds afterMarist
·;
·
_
to
272? What do you say about a game
had scored. Brian Sewing smothered
_
the
where you lose the ball
5
times ~n fu~bles?
ball and Cleary and· company went to work
What do you say about a game hke.thts'?
-
--
once again, on the Lowell 27.
_
-
·
-
.
"There's not much
·
to
be
said,''. says
-
-
_
-
Faced with a fourth and five, Marist
_
coach Malet .
.
"You just forget about the
elected to try for a field goal.
-
}-Juber's bo.~t
gamt; and prepare(or next week.».·
__
·
was good from 27 yards out and Martst
Indeed, this is .what the Red Foxes are
_
was very much in the garne; trailing 14-10.
-
_
going to flave to do. They we~e h~ndled
_
But Marist's enthusiasm died right then.
,.
quite ~onv}ncingly by the Umversity of
Minutes later on
.
two
.
separate occasions
-
Lowell football squad last Saturday after-
_
Marisl coughed the. ball up on f~mbles
.
noon at Leonidoff Field.
-
which led to two quick TD's for Lowell.
Fumbles
_
during the
,
first
_
quarter by
The
'
score was 28-10 at h_alftime with
_
Marist
·
led to two Lowell touchdowns. Fae-
Lowell coasting the rest of the way;
.
·
_ '-
-
ed with a fourth down and long, Lowell
"We were very much in the game until
decided to punt. Dan Kl~dis went
_
deep
·
for
we started fumbling the ball," said Malet.
-
Madst to receive but slipped and f4mbled
"Four of our fumbles led to touchdowns
_
over to Lowell on. the Marist 26. Lowell
early in the game when we were still in it:
·
quarterback
Bill
Stecchi quickly conne_cted
The only excuse for this is a lack of c_oncen-
,
with a perfect strike to Mike Bergstrom
.
tration by our guys;"
_
.
-
who ran it in for six. The kick by Ron Pet-
,
-
While Lowen was running up the score in
-
tinelli was good and Lowell led 7-0.
-
the second half Marist running back Rori-
,
--
On th~ next series of
.
downs Marist again
surrendered the ball with a fumble; after
Mike Spawn had returned the kick off
_
30
__
yards to midfield. Stecchi went to work a~d
_
as the second
_
quarter
-
got
_
underway G~ry
Errico chugged in
•
from the three
.
The kick
was gooland Lowell led 14-0.
_
.
-
The
'
Marist offense was faultermg_on the
nie Shore single.handedly tore up the field
-
with a 28-yard touchdown run and
a:
total
of 78 yards on four carries. Jim Dowd
gained 81.yards on 15 carries; and Ron
_
Dimmie had 70m yards on 15 attempts. Foi:
Lowell, QB Stecchi was 12 for 19 in
_
the air
-
for 190
·
yards
-
and three touchdowns.
-
RB
Errico was impressive for Lowell, gaining
129 ·
-
yards on
_
22 carries and
.
two
touchdowns.
_
ensuing
·
set of downs, when Tom Huber
.
was sent in to
-
punt. Huber took the snap,
faked the punt and raced down
__
to the
EXTRA POINTS
Lowell 47 fcir a first down. This 'play plus
-
the insertion of QB Jim ClearyJ~ho had
The loss is the third in a row for Marist
missed Marist 's lastthree games with an in-
after a 2~ I start.
_
_
, --
-
_
_
jury
to
his throwing hand) seemed to bring
Lowell established a new record of most
-
Marist to life. On Cleary's first play from
points sci;,red with their 56-16 win.
scrimmage, he faked the handoff and took
-_
Marist's final home
..
game will be this
•
the ball on his own down to the Lowell 1 S Saturday at Leonid off Field against Pace
_
fora gain of 32 yards. Five plays later Ron
·
-
University.
Jim Dowd carrles
·
s of his 81 yardsas QB Randy Rosand (11) a~d RB Ron DlmGm
11
le (3h3)
look
on.
_
·
-
_
_
_
- _
_
•
' •
photo by Grace a
_
ag er
·
-,
,
,,-·
ScOreArtd Win
-
Week nuinb~r
two
:_
-
Our Sports Editor Barry
-
Lewis is very
upsef because he hasn
'.
t been able to give
away the Marist basketball' squads old
Jerseys an_d
.
other new, articles from
_
the
.
_ -
·-•
tvfai-ist
-
spe>rts teams.
_
To wir1,just answer as
~
:
:/,;.:,
niany...:sports
:,
questioris
·
as
-
-
-you
. can.
'
After
.-_-_
.
_·
the
·
;,yeek of October 29th, the person with
-_
_
the most ansYleied questions wins
.
lt's
that
simple. Just mail your answers
_
to CIRCLE
SCORE AND.WlN, P.O. Box.857; Marist
College. Enfries
-
subjeci
-
io judgement
·
or
CIRCLE
'
staff. No CIRCLE staff member
.
--
is eligible
to
win.
_
·
-
.
.
_
_
-
-
LAST WEEKS QUESTIONS:
1. Since 1903, how many times has there
not been a World Series?
-
-
-
·
2.
-_
How many home runs did Mickey
Mantle hit in World Series competition?
3. Name the player who holds the record
for most World Series hits in a lifetime?
_
4. Which former Yanke~ player.hit safely
-
inl7 consecutive World Series games?
-
.
_
.
5.
Who hit the first World Series home
.:~
·
·
rurrinYanke~Stadium?
_
·
-
-
THI$ WEEKS QU~STIONS:
, .
. ~
-
_
L
Who was the oniY Yankee who has
·
won
t"'.o
batting ti~les?
-
.
-
,
· 2. Who was th~ last playing manager to
-
·
,
lead hifleam
to
a'pe1.1nant?
:
: _
__
-
·
-
·
-
.
3. Who ihrew the 60th home run ball to
Babe Ruth in 1927?
/
.
·
.
.
_
,
4; Who threw the 61st home run ball to
.
RogerMaris
in
1961?
..
·
-
-
__
<.
S.
'°Which
-
Hall of Farner wore the
-
_
uniforms of all four New York teams: the
-
Giants, the Dodgers; the
·
Ya
'
nkees and the
-
Mets?
- ·
-
·
-
- ·
'~
·
:...
,...:
predicted finish- and out-ran over- l, 100
.
that kept Mike goin
-
g, as he was handed the
-
and that all that mattered was to finish.
-
other participants. His time of 3 hours 18
·
chocolate candy bar on the 59th Street
After that, I was running with a speed that
I can't imagine what it must be like. To
_
minutes and 37 seconds amazed_ him, but
Bridge and held on to it three miles later at
-
now makes
H
hard to believe. I averaged
byBarryLe~s
-
15e
·
a part of the 16,000 mer1 and women
.
his placing almost floored him. Finishing
the 18 mile mark. "I was afraid it
-
would the last two miles of the race in 7:34, and
who nervously, anxiously
·
stood before the 3445 out of 14,496 official runners
_
is a
melt, but I figured it would dojustas well
thefeelingwaswo!1derful."
starting line on the Verranzano Narrows
_
numberthatMikecouldnothavedreamed
·
as the bagel."
-
When he hit the wall, the
Bridge.
-
..
..
,
·
_ ·
about before ihe race, but one that now
.
pain was striving to burst out'. The veins in
"You are running thru. Central Park and
_
__
Ahead of them, 5 boroughs, 26.2
-
miles puts
a:
big grinning smile across his face.
the calfs got
.thicker
and the breathing was
there are twenty rows deep of people cheer-
-
and pain that is inconceivable. They were
heavier. The eyes see fog and the mind at-
ing and screaming you to the point of
from 50 states, tiny villages across the
"The whole race was
.
simply beautiful.
tempts to put an end to the suffering that - esctasy. When I looked up at the
·
clock just
globe. Participants were in wheel chairs
,
The weather was perfect ~nd sc,> were the
each limb in the body is receiving. The
before crossing the finish line, I jumped
and one one-leg. One
-
dribbled a basketball
-
people watching us run. In Brooklyn there
mind is playing tricks, but you have to con-
and just started screaming with joy. My
and another ran the entire race in a waiter's
were high school bands and in the Bronx · trol it.
-
.
two older brothers ran the race also, and
uniform,
·
balancing a bottle of mineral
-
stereos wen~
-
playing so loud that my ears
-
-
for the first time
·
we each were able to
water on a tray. Then there wa
·
s our own
were popping. The excitement motivates
"I was crying to stop, but then_ I realized
finish, and an
·
under four hours. I could
Marist. Marathon Man himself, Mike you so much that you just forget about
that I have
_
been training for three months.
have gone another
_
ten miles after that.
Chung.
-
_
__
running and appreciate eyerything
·
that is
All that preparation would be wasted if I
Well, maybe not ten, but my body felt so ·
·
Mike ran the New York City Marathon
-
-
around you. You reaHy get psyched up.'J
stop, so it became mind overthe body, with
well conditioned that at the time
it
seemed
_like he never ran before. He out-ran his
-Instead of a bagel,
it
was a Hershey Bar
my mind signaling that all wou_l,d. be well,
_
lik~ a good idea.tt
'
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26.6.1
26.6.2
26.6.3
26.6.4
26.6.5
26.6.6
26.6.7
26.6.8
26.6.9
26.6.10
26.6.11
26.6.12